Page numbers in italic type refer to sender/address of dispatch.
Abdul Hamid II (1842–1918), Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (1876–1909). 69, 72, 73, 121, 226n, 236
Abdülaziz (1830–1876), Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (1861–1876). 73
Abeken, Christian von (1826–1890), Saxon jurist and statesman. Minister of justice (1871–1890). 337
Adä, Johann (1845–1905), physician and Württemberg politician. Reichstag member (1886–1890). 432
Addington, Henry (1757–1844), 1st Viscount Sidmouth (1805), British statesman. MP (1784–1805); prime minister (1801–1804); home secretary (1812–1822). 364
Adelmann von Adelmannsfelden, Heinrich Graf (1848–1920), estate owner and politician. Member of the first chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1911–1918) and the Reichstag (1874–1877; 1882–1892). 432
Adlerberg, Nikolai (1819–1892), Russian statesman. Governor of Taganrog, Simferopol and Finland. 71
Adolphe (1817–1905), Duke of Nassau (1839–1866), Grand Duke of Luxembourg (1890). 150
Ahlwardt, Hermann (1846–1914), teacher, publicist, and anti-Semitic politician. Reichstag member (1892–1902). 369–371
Albert, see also Albrecht
Albert (1819–1861), Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. From 1840 husband and consort of Queen Victoria, who granted him the title Prince Consort in 1857. 4, 149
Albert (1828–1902), King of Saxony from 1873. 267, 269, 278, 297, 299, 313–315, 328–329, 332, 352–353, 380–381, 383, 385–386, 405, 407, 412–413, 418, 468, 509
Albrecht (1837–1906), Prussian prince and general field marshal. Regent of the Duchy of Brunswick from 1885. 55n, 119, 145, 428
Albrecht (1865–1939), Duke of Württemberg and German general. 434
Alexander (1857–1893), born Prince Alexander von Battenberg. Elected prince (knyaz) of Bulgaria (1879–1886). 15, 19–20, 65n–67, 70–71, 75–76, 99–101, 226, 229–231, 233–236, 285–287, 350n
Alexander (1823–1888), Prince of Hesse and by Rhine and German general. 19, 226n–227, 229
Alexander III (1845–1894), Tsar of Russia from 1881. 50, 53, 67–68, 71, 76, 92–95, 120–121, 153–154, 184, 201–202, 234, 285, 350, 396, 529, 541
Alexandra (1844–1925), Princess of Denmark. Married Edward, Prince of Wales (1863); Queen consort of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1901–1910). 54n, 299
Alexandra Feodorovna (1872–1918), née Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine; after marriage to Nicholas II Tsarina of Russia (1894–1917). 183, 259, 262
Alexei Alexandrovich (1850–1908), Grand Duke of Russia; head of the Russian naval department and general-admiral of the imperial fleet. 401
Alfred (1844–1900), Duke of Edinburgh. Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1893). 20, 148–149, 152, 295
Alfred, (1874–1899), British prince. From 1893 hereditary prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. 295, 474
Alice (1843–1878), Princess of the United Kingdom. Married Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine in 1862; Grand Duchess of Hesse from 1877. 19, 244
Alvensleben, Friedrich Johann Graf von (1836–1913), German diplomat. Consul general at Bucharest (1876), minister resident at Darmstadt (1880); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at The Hague (1882), Washington (1884), and Brussels (1886); ambassador to St Petersburg (1901–1905). 124
Alvensleben, Gustav Herman von (1827–1905), Prussian and German general. Commander of the XIII (Royal Württemberg) imperial army corps (1886–1890). 446
Ampthill, see Russell, Odo
Anderson, Henry Percy (1831–1896), civil servant (Foreign Office). Junior clerk (1854); assistant clerk (1865); senior clerk (1873); assistant under-secretary of state (1894). 13, 35n, 41, 158n, 160n, 168, 179n, 227, 237, 318
Antonelli, Giacomo (1806–1876), Italian cardinal deacon. Cardinal secretary of state (1848). 79
Arendt, Otto (1854–1936), publicist and conservative politician. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1886–1918) and the Reichstag (1898–1918). 347, 372
Arnim-Suckow, Harry Graf von (1824–1881), Prussian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Lisbon (1862), Kassel (1863), Munich (1863), to the Holy See (1864), and Paris (1871; 1872–1874 as imperial ambassador); fled to Switzerland to avoid prison sentence (1875). 127, 130, 165, 364
Arnold, Thomas (1795–1842), English educationist; headmaster of Rugby School (1828–1841). 354
Arnulf (1852–1907), Prince of Bavaria. General. 428
Asch zu Asch, Adolf Freiherr von (1830–1906), Bavarian general and minister of war (1893–1905). 550
Augusta (1811–1890), Princess of Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach. Married Wilhelm I in 1829; Queen of Prussia from 1861; German Empress from 1871. 38, 40, 101
Augusta (1843–1919), Princess of Saxe-Meiningen. Married Prince Moritz of Saxe-Altenburg in Meiningen in 1862. 40
Auguste (1826–1898), Princess of Württemberg. Married Hermann of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach in 1851. 434
Auguste Viktoria (1858–1921), Princess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg. Married Wilhelm II in 1881; German Empress and Queen of Prussia, 1888–1918. 141, 212, 259, 325, 328
Auiti, Andrea (1849–1905), Italian archbishop. Apostolic nuncio in Munich (1893–1896) and Lisbon (1896–1903); cardinal priest (1903). 534
Bachmaier, Benedikt (1852–1912), Bavarian farmer and politician (Bavarian Peasants’ League). Member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1893–1904) and the Reichstag (1893–1912). 531
Badt, Lippmann (dates unknown), bookseller and editor of the Dresdner Zeitung. 325, 327
Balfour, Arthur James (1848–1930), politician and statesman. MP (1874–1922); secretary for Scotland (1886), chief secretary for Ireland (1887), first lord of the treasury (1891–1892; 1895–1905), lord privy seal (1902), prime minister (1902–1905), first lord of the admiralty (1915–1916), foreign secretary (1916–1919), lord president of the council (1919–1922; 1925–1929); created Earl of Balfour and Viscount Traprain (1922). 140, 179, 183, 185, 194, 199, 201–203, 206–207, 209–210, 213–215, 257, 259–260, 403–405, 408, 412–414, 462, 545–546, 547, 551
Ballantine, William (1812–1887), English lawyer and serjeant-at-law. 502
Barrère, Camille (1851–1940), French diplomat. Consul general at Cairo (1882); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Stockholm (1885), Munich (1891; from 1888 permanent chargé d'affaires), and Berne (1894); ambassador to Rome (1897–1924). 375–376, 510, 523–524
Barrington, Eric (1847–1918), British civil servant. Principal private secretary to the secretary of state for foreign affairs (1885–1892; 1895–1905); assistant under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1906–1907). 418
Barron, Sir Henry (1824–1900), British diplomat. Secretary of legation at Lisbon (1858) and Brussels (1861; 1871); secretary of embassy at Constantinople (1866); again secretary of legation at Brussels (1871); minister resident at Stuttgart (1883–1890). 6–7, 20, 24, 423–433
Barth, Theodor (1849–1909), lawyer and liberal politician. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1898–1903) and the Reichstag (1881–1898; 1901–1903). 379
Barthélemy-Saint-Hilaire, Jules (1805–1895), French statesman, journalist and philosopher. 291
Bashford, John Laidlay (1852–1908), British author and journalist. Berlin correspondent of the Daily Telegraph (1885–1903), then of the Manchester Guardian, Daily Graphic, Pall Mall Gazette, and Westminster Gazette. 69–70, 195–196
Battenberg, Franz Joseph von (1861–1924), German prince, youngest son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine and Julia von Battenberg. 229–230
Battenberg, Ludwig von (1854–1921), eldest son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine and Julia von Battenberg. British naval officer from the age of 15; admiral 1904; First Sea Lord, 1912, resigned 27 October 1914. From 1917 Louis Alexander Mountbatten, 1st Marquess of Milford Haven. 229
Baur von Breitenfeld, Fidel (1835–1886), Württemberg diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Karlsruhe (1869), Vienna (1872) and Berlin (1881–1886; at the same time plenipotentiary at the Federal Council). 33
Bayha, Friedrich (1832–1902), innkeeper and politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1868–1870; 1890–1894) and the Reichstag (1887–1890). 432
Bazaine, François Achille (1811–1888), French general. Marshal of France (1864). 114–115
Beaconsfield, see Disraeli, Benjamin
Beauclerk, William Nelthorpe (1849–1908), British diplomat. Third secretary at Athens (1876), Berne (1877), and St Petersburg (1879); second secretary at Rome (1880), Washington (1887), and Berlin (1888); secretary of legation at Peking (1890); consul general at Budapest (1896); minister resident at Lima (1898–1908). 111–113, 117–119
Bebel, August (1840–1913), socialist politician. Member of the Reichstag (1867–1913) and the Saxon second chamber (1881–1891); co-founder of the Sozialdemokratische Arbeiterpartei (1869); chairman of the Sozialdemokratischen Partei Deutschlands from 1892. 209n, 266–272, 279–281, 302, 345, 352, 356, 392, 535–536
Beckford, William (1709–1770), English politician. MP (1754–1770) and lord mayor of London (1762 and 1769). 363
Behr-Bandelin, Felix Graf von (1834–1894), German estate owner and promoter of colonialism. Co-founder of the Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft (1884) and founder member of the nationalist Alldeutscher Verband (1891). 34
Bennigsen, Rudolf von (1824–1902), Hanoverian and Prussian politician. Member of the Hanoverian Landtag (1855–1866), the Prussian house of deputies (1867–1883; its president 1873–1879), and the Reichstag (1867–1883; 1887–1898); Landesdirektor (1868–1888) and Oberpräsident of the Prussian province of Hanover (1888–1897). 107–110
Berchem, Maximilian Graf von (1841–1910), German diplomat. Secretary of embassy at St Petersburg (1875) and Vienna (1878); consul general at Budapest (1883); director of the trade division (1885) and under-secretary of state at the Berlin foreign office (1886–1890). 63, 89
Beresford, Charles William de la Poer (1846–1919), British admiral and politician. MP (1874–1880; 1885–1889; 1898–1900; 1902–1903; 1910–1916); styled Lord Beresford (1859); 1st Baron Beresford (1916). 325
Bergne, Sir John Henry Gibbs (1842–1908), civil servant (Foreign Office). Assistant clerk (1880); superintendent of the treaty department (1881); superintendent of the commercial department and examiner of treaties (1894). 295n, 427n, 434, 480
Berlepsch, Hans Hermann von (1843–1926), German jurist and politician. Oberpräsident of the Prussian Rhine Province (1898); Prussian minister for trade (1890–1896). 121
Bernhard III (1851–1928), last Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (1914–1918). 297
Bertie, Francis (1844–1919), British diplomat. Acting senior clerk (1882), senior clerk (1889), and assistant under-secretary (1894) in the Eastern department of the Foreign Office; ambassador to Rome (1903) and Paris (1905–1918); 1st Baron (1915) and 1st Viscount Bertie of Thame (1918). 65
Beust, Friedrich Ferdinand Freiherr von (1809–1886), Saxon and Austrian diplomat and statesman. Saxon foreign minister (1849–1866; from 1852 also minister of the interior; from 1858 also minister president); Austro-Hungarian foreign minister (1866); also minister president (1867) and Reichskanzler (imperial chancellor) (1868); Austro-Hungarian ambassador to London (1871–1878) and Paris (1878–1882). 291
Bierey, Emil (1838–1899), Saxon journalist. Stenographer in the Saxon Landtag (1857–1872); editor of the Dresdner Nachrichten (1872–1890). 310–311, 325, 335, 343
Bismarck, Herbert von (1849–1904), German diplomat and politician; son of Otto von Bismarck. Worked at the Berlin foreign office from 1873; Botschaftsrat in London (1882); envoy to The Hague (1884); under-secretary (1885) and state secretary for foreign affairs (1886–1890). Reichstag member (1884–1886; 1893–1904). 16, 46, 49n, 59–60, 68–69, 81, 83, 87–88, 93–95, 105, 114–116, 121, 124–125, 155, 205–206, 275, 283n, 325n, 326–327, 393
Bismarck, Otto von (1815–1898), Prussian statesman. Envoy to the Federal Diet at Frankfurt (1851–1859), ambassador to St Petersburg (1859) and Paris (1862); Prussian minister president and foreign minister (1862–1872; 1873–1890); chancellor of the North German Confederation (1867-1871); Reichstag member (1867; 1891–1893); from 1880 also Prussian minister of trade (1880–1890); imperial chancellor (1871–1890); Graf 1865; Fürst 1871. 8–10, 13–17, 20, 22, 33, 36, 41–54, 56–65, 67, 70–80, 84–85, 92, 94–106, 108, 111, 115, 120–133, 135, 141–142, 145–146, 165–166, 174–177, 201–202, 204–206, 222, 231, 238, 248, 254–256, 265, 272, 274–276, 285n, 288–289, 295, 301–304, 307n–310, 313, 315–316, 318, 321, 325–328, 330, 335, 343–344, 348, 349–350, 355–356, 361–364, 367, 371, 373, 378, 384–387, 390, 392–394, 416n, 417, 425, 453, 468, 470, 473, 474–476, 478, 484–485, 490–491, 493, 496–497, 507–508, 513, 526, 528–529, 540–541
Bissing, Walter Freiherr (b.1855), journalist. London correspondent of the Kreuzeitung from 1888 to 1900. 180
Bleichröder, Gerson von (1822–1893), German banker. From 1855 head of the banking firm of S. Bleichröder. 102, 336
Blokland, Jonkheer Gerard Beelaerts van (1843–1897), Dutch jurist and South African diplomat. From 1884 representative (minister resident) of the South African Republic at Berlin, Lisbon and Paris; from 1889 as envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. 173, 180
Blumenthal, Leonhard Graf von (1810–1900), Prussian field marshal. 520
Blumenthal, Werner von (1847–1928), Prussian military officer and chamberlain. Master of ceremonies under Wilhelm I 395
Boetticher, Karl Heinrich von (1833–1907), Prussian civil servant, politician and statesman. State secretary of the imperial office of the interior (1880–1897) and vice chancellor (1881–1897). 124, 186, 217n, 388, 400
Bönisch, Friedrich (1832–1894), Saxon jurist and liberal politician. Second mayor of Dresden (1884–1894); member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1875–1894). 334
Boothby, Sir Brooke (1856–1913), British diplomat. Second secretary at Vienna (1889), Munich (1895), and Paris (1896); secretary of legation at Rio de Janeiro (1898), Tokyo (1901), and Brussels (1902); councillor of embassy at Vienna (1905–1907). 544–545, 547–549
Boulanger, Georges (1837–1891), French general and politician. Minister of war (1886–1887). 2n, 87, 89–90, 135, 282n, 290, 309
Brackenbury, Henry (1837–1914), British army officer. Private secretary to the viceroy of India (1880), acting military attaché at Paris (1881–1882); director of military intelligence (1886–1891). 69, 491
Brausewetter, Georg Robert (1836–1896), judge. From 1888 director of the Berlin district court. 369
Briggs, Thomas (1795–1864), British banker, murdered by Franz Müller on a train. 501
Bronsart von Schellendorff, Walther (1833–1914), Prussian general. Prussian minister of war (1893–1896); adjutant general to Wilhelm II (1896). 177, 183–184, 186, 209, 490
Bruno, Giordano (1548–1600), Dominican friar, philosopher, and astronomer. 512
Buchanan, Sir George William (1854–1924), British diplomat. Secretary of legation and chargé d'affaires at Darmstadt and Karlsruhe (1893); agent on the Venezuela boundary arbitration tribunal in Paris (1898); secretary of embassy at Rome (1900) and Berlin (1901); consul general at Sofia (1903); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at The Hague (1909); ambassador to St Petersburg (1910) and Rome (1919–1921). 8, 18–19, 249
Buchner, Max (1846–1921), German physician, ethnographer and colonial explorer. 36
Buddeberg, Louis Heinrich (1836–1925), Saxon merchant and liberal politician. Reichstag member (1881–1898; 1907–1912). 342
Bülow, Bernhard von (1849–1929), German statesman and diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Bucharest (1888); ambassador to Rome (1893); imperial state secretary for foreign affairs (1897–1900); imperial chancellor and Prussian minister president (1900–1909). 154, 213–214
Bülow, Maria von (1848–1929), née Beccadelli di Bologna, married to Karl August von Dönhof from 1867 to 1882; married Bernhard von Bülow in 1886. 154
Bulwer-Lytton, Edward Robert (1831–1891), British statesman, diplomat and poet. Secretary of legation at Copenhagen (1863), Athens (1864), Lisbon (1865), and Madrid (1868); secretary of embassy at Vienna (1868), and Paris (1868; from 1873 minister); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Lisbon (1874); viceroy and governor general of India (1876–1880); ambassador to Paris (1887); 1st Earl of Lytton (1880). 102
Bunsen, Christian Karl Josias Freiherr von (1791–1860), Prussian diplomat. Chargé d'affaires at the Prussian legation to the Holy See (1823), minister resident (1827), and envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary (1834–1838); envoy extraordinary to Berne (1839–1841) and London (1842–1854); also the provisional central government's envoy to London (December 1848–May 1849); member of the Frankfurt National Assembly (May 1848–January 1849) and the Prussian upper house (1858). 295
Buol-Berenberg, Rudolf von (1842–1902), jurist and Catholic politician. Member of the second chamber of Baden (1881–1896) and the Reichstag (1884–1898; its president 1895–1898). 175
Burkardt, Germain (1821–1890), farmer and Württemberg politician. Reichstag member (1887–1890). 432
Burke, Edmund (1729–1797), Anglo-Irish politician, statesman, philosophical and political thinker. 302, 366
Burkhardt, Theodor Otto (b.1846) wood-block cutter and socialist agitator. 270
Bürklin, Albert (1844–1924), jurist and National Liberal politician. Member of the second chamber of Baden (1875–1881), the Reichstag (1877–1898), and the first chamber of Baden (1905–1918). 175
Burns, John (1858–1943), English politician and trades unionist. MP (1892–1918); president of the Local Government Board (1905–1914) and the Board of Trade (1914). 389
Burt, Thomas (1837–1922), British trades unionist and politician. MP (1874–1918); parliamentary secretary to the Board of Trade (1892–1895). 389
Busch, Clemens August (1834–1895), German diplomat. Consul general at Budapest (1878); acting secretary of state at the Berlin foreign office (1881); under-secretary of state (1881); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Bucharest (1885), Stockholm (1888), and Berne (1892–1895). 39–41
Cadogan, Henry George Gerald (1859–1893), British diplomat. Third secretary at Berlin (1883); second secretary at Munich (1885); secretary of legation at Teheran (1890). 435, 503–506, 515
Camesa-Sasca, Karl (dates unknown), German merchant. President of the German club in Moscow. 548
Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry (1836–1908), British politician and statesman. MP (1868–1908); chief secretary for Ireland (1884–1885); secretary of state for war (1886; 1892–1895); prime minister (1905–1908). 143, 527
Caprivi, Leo von (1831–1899), German general and statesman. Imperial chancellor (1890–1894) and Prussian minister president (1890–1892). 16–18, 124, 126–127, 132, 136, 138–144, 146, 157, 162–168, 182, 186, 201, 203, 205, 248n, 358–360, 363–365, 367–368, 372–374, 377, 384–385, 388–389, 392–393, 447, 452–455, 521–522, 526, 529, 540
Carew-Hunt, Henry Thomas (1846–1923), British consular agent. Consul at Port-au-Prince (1883), Königsberg (1886), and Danzig (1889); consul general at New Orleans (1903–1915). 90–91
Carnot, Marie François Sadi (1837–1894), French statesman. President (1887–1894). 153, 161–162
Carola (1833–1907), Princess of Wasa-Holstein-Gottorp. Queen of Saxony from 1873. 418
Casimir-Perier, Jean (1847–1907), French statesman. Prime minister and minister of foreign affairs (1893–1894); president (1894–1895). 160
Cavendish, Spencer Compton (1833–1908), Marquess of Hartington (1858), 8th Duke of Devonshire (1891), British statesman and politician. MP (1857–1891); secretary of state for war (1866; 1882–1885); chief secretary for Ireland (1871–1874); secretary of state for India (1880–1882); lord president of the council (1895–1903). 179, 183, 193, 199, 201–203, 206–207, 209–210, 213–215, 259–260, 337, 412, 462, 546, 551
Cavour, Camillo Benso, conte di (1810–1861), Italian statesman. Minister president of Sardinia (1852–1859; 1860–1861); first prime minister of Italy (1861). 343
Cawston, George (1851–1918), British financier and broker. From 1889 to 1898 on the board of the directors of the British South Africa Company; chairman of South-West Africa Company (1893–1904). 168–169
Chamberlain, Joseph (1836–1914), British politician and statesman. MP (1876–1914); president of the Board of Trade (1880–1885); secretary of state for the colonies (1895–1903). 188, 194, 199, 412–413, 462, 545
Chapman, Edward Francis (1840–1926), British general. Director of military intelligence at the War Office (1891–1896). 373, 525, 527
Charlotte (1860–1919), Princess of Prussia and, from 1914 to 1918, Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen, as wife of Bernhard III 297
Charlotte (1864–1946), Princess of Schaumburg-Lippe. Married Prince Wilhelm of Württemberg in 1886; Queen of Württemberg, 1891–1918. 434, 442
Chatham, see Pitt, William
Cherevin, Petr Alexandrovich (1837–1896), Russian general. Head of the secret police (1880); adjutant general to Alexander III 94
Childers, Hugh (1827–1896), British statesman. MP (1860–1892); secretary of state for war (1880–1882); chancellor of the exchequer (1882–1885); home secretary (1886). 60
Christian IX (1818–1906), King of Denmark from 1863. From 1863 to 1864 also Duke of Holstein, Schleswig, and Lauenburg. 54, 154
Churchill, Lord Randolph Henry Spencer (1849–1895), British statesman and politician. MP (1874–1895); secretary of state for India (1885); chancellor of the exchequer (1886). 66, 67–68, 70, 230, 286–287
Cleveland, Grover (1837–1908), President of the United States of America (1885–1889; 1893–1897). 299–300
Cockayne-Cust, Henry (1861–1917), English politician and author. Editor of the Pall Mall Gazette (1892–1896); MP (1890–1895; 1900–1906). 191
Cockerell, William A. (1840–1919), civil servant at the Foreign Office from 1860; assistant clerk (1877); senior clerk (1893–1906). 170, 340
Conrad, Michael Georg (1846–1927), German publicist and naturalist writer. Reichstag member (1896–1898). 538
Corbett, Sir Vincent Edwin Henry (1861–1936), British diplomat. Attaché at Berlin (1885); third secretary at Berlin (1886), The Hague (1887), and Rome (1888); second secretary at Constantinople (1891), Copenhagen (1894), and Athens (1895; from 1900 secretary of legation); British commissioner at the Caisse de la Dette Publique in Cairo (1903); minister resident at Caracas (1907) and at Munich (1910–1914). 60
Courcel, Alphonse Chodron de (1835–1919), French diplomat. Ambassador to Berlin (1881–1886) and London (1894–1898). 40
Cousin-Montauban, Charles, comte de Palikao (1796–1878), French general and statesman. Prime minister and minister of war (August–September 1870). 322
Crailsheim, Friedrich Krafft von (1841–1926), Bavarian statesman. Minister of foreign affairs (1880–1903), minister president (1890–1903); member of the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1895–1918). 427, 468, 478, 481, 484n, 490, 495, 497–498, 505–506, 510, 516–518, 521–523, 530, 544, 550–551
Crawford, James Adair (dates unknown), British colonial civil servant. Under-secretary to the foreign department of the government of India (1892); chief political resident of the Persian Gulf (1893); acting chief commissioner of Baluchistan (1895). 197n
Crispi, Francesco (1818–1901), Italian politician and statesman. Prime minister of Italy (1887–1891; 1893–1896); minister of the interior (1877–1878; 1887–1881; 1893–1896); foreign minister (1887–1891). 128–129, 140, 155
Cross, Richard Assheton (1823–1914), British statesman and politician. MP (1857–1862; 1868–1886); home secretary (1874–1880; 1885–1886); secretary of state for India (1886–1892); lord privy seal (1895–1900); created Viscount Cross (1886). 279
Crowe, Sir Joseph Archer (1825–1896), British diplomat, art historian, and journalist. Consul general at Leipzig (1860) and Düsseldorf (1872); commercial attaché at Berlin (1880); commercial attaché for Europe at Paris (1882–1896). 358
Currie, Philip Henry Wodehouse (1834–1906), British diplomat. Senior clerk (1873), principal private secretary to the foreign secretary (1878–1880); assistant permanent under-secretary of state (1882), permanent under-secretary (1889); ambassador to Constantinople (1894) and Rome (1898–1903); 1st Baron Currie (1899). 6, 432, 440
Curzon, George Nathaniel (1859–1925), British statesman. MP (1886–1898); parliamentary under-secretary of state for India (1891–1892) and for foreign affairs (1895–1898); viceroy and governor general of India (1899–1905); secretary of state for foreign affairs (1919–1924). Created Baron Curzon of Kedleston (1898), 5th Baron Scarsdale, (1916); Marquess Curzon of Kedleston and Earl of Kedleston (1921). 202, 403
Dallas, Sir George E. (1842–1918), civil servant (Foreign Office). Assistant clerk (1881), senior clerk Western Department (1890), chief clerk (1896–1900) 274, 277, 473, 475
Daller, Balthasar von (1835–1911), Catholic priest and politician. From 1864 professor at the Freising Lyceum, from 1886 its rector; member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1871–1911). 514, 530, 545
Davis, Edmund (1861–1939), British businessman, mining financier and art collector. 168
Degouy, Robert (1862–1912), French naval officer. 163
Deimling, Ludwig von (1833–1906), military officer from Baden. From 1870 in Prussian service. 240
Deines, Adolf von (1845–1911), Prussian officer. Military attaché at Madrid (1885) and Vienna (1887–1884); from 1888 aide-de-camp to Wilhelm I; commanding general of the VII imperial army corps at Koblenz (1902–1906). 114–115
Delbrück, Hans (1848–1929), German historian and politician. Tutor to Prince Waldemar of Prussia (1874–1879); professor at Berlin University (1885); member of the Prussian house of deputies (1882–1885) and the Reichstag (1884–1890). 185
Delguey de Malavas, Jacques (1852–1942), French naval officer and military historian. 163
Deligiannis, Theodoros (1820–1905), Greek statesman. Minister of foreign affairs (1863; 1864–1865; 1869–1870; 1878) and prime minister (1885–1886; 1890–1892; 1895–1897; 1902–1903; 1904–1905). 260
Deloncle, François (1856–1922), French politician and consul. Member of the Chamber of deputies (1889–1898; 1902–1914). 390–391
Derby, see Stanley, Edward Henry
Déroulède, Paul (1846–1914), French writer and politician. Co-founder of the nationalist Ligue des Patriotes (1882). 134, 290
Detring, Gustav (1842–1913), German civil servant. Customs offical at Tientsin (1875–1905). 202
Devonshire, see Cavendish, Spencer Compton
Dilke, Charles Wentworth (1843–1911), 2nd baronet (1869), English politician. MP (1868–1885; 1892–1911); parliamentary under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1880–1882); member of the privy council (1882); president of the Local Government Board (1882–1885). 7–8, 33–34, 36–37, 39, 47, 49, 222, 265, 267, 271, 274, 467, 469–472
Disraeli, Benjamin (1804–1881), British statesman. MP (1837–1876); chancellor of the exchequer (1852; 1858–1859; 1866–1868); prime minister (1868, 1874–1880); created Earl of Beaconsfield (1876). 56–57, 317
Dönhoff, Karl August Graf von (1833–1906), Prussian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Dresden (1879–1906). 154
Douglas, Hugo Sholto Graf (1837–1912), German entrepreneur, writer, and politician. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1882–1912). 321
Dreesbach, August (1844–1906), carpenter, journalist, and socialist politician. Member of the Baden Landtag (1891–1902) and the Reichstag (1890–1893; 1898–1906). 242
Drobe, Franz Kaspar (1808–1891), Catholic priest. Bishop of Paderborn from 1882. 480
Drummond, Sir Victor (1833–1907), British diplomat. Secretary of legation at Rio de Janeiro (1873) and Washington (1877); secretary of embassy at Vienna (1882); chargé d'affaires at Munich (1885); minister resident at Munich and at Stuttgart (1890–1903). 6–8, 19, 23, 448–458, 486–503, 506–543, 545–547, 549–552
Drury, Henry (1778–1841), English scholar and educator; master at Harrow School (1801–1841). 354
Dufferin, see Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, Frederick
Düfflipp, Lorenz von (1821–1886), Bavarian civil servant and court secretary to Ludwig II (1866–1877). 483
Durège, Max (dates unknown), British consular agent. Vice consul at Danzig (1883–1895). 91
Eckhard, Carl (8922–1910), jurist, entrepreneur and National Liberal politician. Member of the second chamber of the Baden Landtag (1861–1863; 1865–1873) and the Reichstag (1871–1874). 248
Edward (1841–1910), Prince of Wales. Crowned Edward VII, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and Emperor of India in 1901. 33, 41, 54, 56, 60, 63, 68–69, 73, 75, 77, 81, 85–86, 89, 91, 93, 94–95, 98, 100, 102, 104, 113–114, 121, 124–126, 128–129, 131, 138, 141, 143, 145, 147–148, 162, 174, 176, 185, 199, 201, 203, 207, 209, 212–213, 215, 235, 246–247, 254–256, 260–261, 279, 288, 290, 295, 299, 301, 312, 340, 363, 375, 469–471, 473, 480, 485–486, 488, 491, 498, 508, 519, 526, 529
Eisenlohr, August (1833–1916), Civil servant and statesman. Ministerialdirektor (1883), Staatsrat (1890) and president (1892–1900; from 1893 with the title of minister) of the Baden ministry of the interior. Member of the second chamber of the Baden Landtag (1866–1870) and the Reichstag (1877–1878). 246–247, 251, 253
Eissenstein-Chotta, Arthur Ritter von und zu (1846–1911), Austrian diplomat and writer (pseud. Max von Essen). Secretary of embassy at Berlin (1887–1892). 92
Elizabeth I (1533–1603), Queen of England and Ireland from 1558. 411
Ellrichshausen, Joseph Freiherr von (1832–1906), estate owner and politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1882–1895) and the Reichstag (1887–1890). 432
Ellstätter, Moritz (1827–1905), Civil servant and statesman. Baden minister for finances (1868–1893); from 1871 also plenipotentiary at the Federal Council. 241, 246
Emin Pasha (Eduard Schnitzer) (1840–1892), German physician and naturalist. Explorer of Africa and governor of the Egyptian province of Equatoria. 319
Erbach-Schönberg, Marie von (1852–1923), née Marie von Battenberg, German princess. Translator and writer. 229
Erhardt, Alois von (1831–1888), Bavarian jurist and politician. Mayor of Munich (1870–1887). 497
Ernst August (1845–1923), Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale; last Crown Prince of Hanover (from 1851). Followed his father, Georg V, into exile in Austria in 1866. 55–57, 473–478
Eulenburg, Botho Graf zu (1831–1912), Prussian statesman. Oberpräsident of the province of Hanover (1873–1878) and the province of Hesse-Nassau (1881–1892); minister of the interior (1878–1881; 1892–1894) and minister president (1892–1894). From 1899 member of the Prussian upper chamber. 164, 166–167
Eulenburg, Graf Philip zu (1847–1921), Prussian diplomat and close friend of Wilhelm II. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Stuttgart (1890) and Munich (1891); imperial ambassador to Vienna (1894–1902). 447
Eyschen, Paul (1841–1915), Luxembourg statesman, and diplomat. Prime minister (1888–1915). 150
Fabrice, Alfred Graf von (1818–1891), Saxon general and statesman. Minister of war (1866–1891); minister president (1876); and from 1882 also foreign minister. 267–268, 276, 279, 284, 351, 478
Farnall, Harry de la Rosa Burrard (dates unknown), civil servant (Foreign Office). Junior clerk (1873); assistant clerk (1894); senior clerk (1900). 403
Fergusson, Sir James (1832–1907), 6th baronet of Kilkerran (1849), British politician and colonial administrator. MP (1854–1857; 1859–1868; 1885–1906); governor of South Australia (1869–1873), New Zealand (1873–1874), and Bombay (1880–1885); parliamentary under-secretary of state for India (1867–1868), home department (1867–1868), and for foreign affairs (1886–1891); postmaster general (1891–1892). 336
Ferry, Jules (1832–1893), French politician and statesman. Mayor of Paris (1870–1871); prime minister (1880–1881; 1883–1885). 64
Fichte, Johann Gottlieb (1762–1814), German philosopher. 304, 328
Finger, Jakob (1825–1904), jurist and Hessian statesman. Minister president and grand ducal minister of foreign affairs, of the interior, and of justice (1884–1898). Member of the second chamber (1862–1865) and the first chamber (18991903) of the Hessian Landtag. 232, 236, 243–244
Fischer, Ludwig von (1832–1900), politician. Mayor of Augsburg (1866–1900); member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1863–1900) and of the Reichstag (1871–1874; 1884–1884; 1898–1900). 432
Fleck, Franz Ludwig (François Louis) (1824–1899), Bishop of Metz. 150
Förster, Paul (1844–1925), teacher, politician and anti-Semitic publicist. Reichstag member (1892–1898). 211
Fort, George Seymour (1858–1951), British colonial administrator and author. Resident magistrate at Umtali (1893). 196
Franckenstein, Georg Freiherr von und zu (1825–1890), landowner and politician. Member of the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1847–1890) and the Reichstag (1872–1890). 481, 488, 493–494, 496–497, 528
Frankenburger, Wolf (1826–1889), lawyer and Bavarian politician. Member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1869–1884) and the Reichstag (1874–1878). 427
Franz Joseph I (1830–1916), Emperor of Austria and Apostolic King of Hungary from 1848. 248n, 352
Fredericks, Vladimir Alexandrovich (1837–1892), Russian diplomat. Minister plenipotentiary and envoy extraordinary to Stuttgart (1884–1892; at the same time accredited to Baden).
Frederik VIII (1843–1912), King of Denmark from 1906. 154
Frege-Weltzien, Arnold von (1841–1916), estate owner, publicist, and conservative politician. Member of the first chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1893–1916) and the Reichstag (1878–1903). 386
Friedensburg, Ferdinand (1824–1891), Prussian jurist and mayor of Breslau (1870–1891). 320
Friedrich I (1754–1816), King of Württemberg from 1806. 448
Friedrich I (1826–1907), son of Leopold I of Baden. Deputized for his brother Ludwig II as regent from 1852; Grand Duke of Baden from 1856. 177, 234–235, 238–240, 245–246, 249–250, 251, 254–255, 257–258, 261–262
Friedrich II (Frederick the Great) (1712–1786), King in Prussia from 1740, King of Prussia from 1772. 367, 408
Friedrich III (1833–1888), German Emperor and King of Prussia (1888), reigned for ninety-nine days. 18, 20, 39–40, 84–86, 95–99, 104–105, 107, 109, 111–114, 117, 122, 185, 298, 304–305, 307–310, 313, 315–317, 320n, 324, 349, 352, 394, 428, 434, 500, 503–504, 520
Friedrich Karl (1828–1885), Prince of Prussia. Prussian general. 106
Friedrich Wilhelm (1620–1688), Elector of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia from 1640. 366, 406, 408
Friedrich Wilhelm I (1688–1740), King in Prussia and Elector of Brandenburg from 1713. 307n, 366
Friedrich Wilhelm II (1744–1797), King of Prussia from 1786. 323
Friedrich Wilhelm III (1770–1840), King of Prussia from 1797. 62
Friedrich Wilhelm IV (1795–1861), King of Prussia from 1840. 321
Friedrich Wilhelm, see Friedrich III
Friedrich, Alexander (1843–1906), teacher and National Liberal politician. Member of the second chamber of the Hessian Landtag (1884–1899). 255
Friesen-Rötha, Heinrich von (1831–1910), Saxon estate owner, military officer and conservative politician. Member of the first chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1883–1892) and the Reichstag (1887–1893). 314
Gaupp, Friedrich Ludwig (1832–1901), jurist and politician. Judge in Ellwangen (1873); professor at the University of Tübingen (1897). Reichstag member (1874–1877). 448–449
Gautsch (dates unknown), Alsation police officer at at Ars-sur-Moselle. 83
Geffcken, Friedrich Heinrich (1830–1896), German jurist and diplomat. Hanseatic chargé d'affaires (1856) at Berlin; minister resident at Berlin (1859) and London (1866–1867); professor at Strasbourg (1872–1881). 112, 315, 364
Geiger, Joseph Egid (1833–1912), jurist and Bavarian politician. Member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1881–1887) and the Reichstag (1881–1911). 427, 513, 515
Geiser, Bruno (1846–1898), German journalist and socialist politician. Reichstag member (1881–1887). 272
Georg V (1819–1878), Crown Prince of Hanover (1837); King of Hanover (1851–1866). 55n, 285n, 478
Georg Wilhelm (1880–1912), hereditary Prince of Hanover. 478
George (1819–1904), British prince, 2nd Duke of Cambridge (1850). British army officer. 54, 56, 473, 475
Gessler, Theodor von (1821–1886), Württemberg jurist and statesman. Professor at the University of Tübingen (1857), from 1863 its chancellor. Minister for church and school affairs (1870–1885); member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1862–1870). 426
Gibbon, Edward (1737–1794), British historian and MP (1774–1784). 306
Giers, Nikolai (1820–1895), Russian diplomat and statesman. Minister of foreign affairs (1882–1894). 53n, 71, 82n, 92–93
Gisela (1856–1932), Archduchess of Austria. Married Prince Leopold of Bavaria in 1873. 497
Gladstone, William Ewart (1809–1898), British statesman and politician. MP (1832–1845; 1847–1890); chancellor of the exchequer (1852–1855; 1859–1866; 1873–1874; 1880–1882); prime minister (1868–1874; 1880–1885; 1886; 1892–1894). 51–52, 72–73n, 283n–284, 286–287, 291, 299, 360–361, 368n–369, 380, 386, 470n
Glaser, Menrad (1853–1896), typesetter and socialist politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1895–1896). 461
Goldbeck, Bernhard (dates unknown), British consular agent. Vice consul (1880) and consul (1886–1893; repeatedly acting consul general) at Frankfurt. 227–228
Gönner, Albert (1838–1909), jurist, civil servant and politician. Mayor of Baden Baden (1875–1907) and member of second chamber of the Baden Landtag (1883–1908; 1893–1906 its president). 252
Görtz-Wrisberg, Hermann Graf (1819–1889), Brunswick civil servant and statesman. State minister president and plenipotentiary at the Federal Council (1883–1889); president of the council of the regency (1884–1885). 56
Goschen, George Joachim (1831–1907), British statesman and politician. MP (1863–1900); chancellor of the exchequer (1887–1892); first lord of the admiralty (1871–1874; 1895–1900); 1st Viscount Goschen (1900). 298, 338, 346, 402, 462, 491, 551
Göser, Johannes (1828–1893), priest and Württemberg politician. Reichstag member (1887–1893). 432
Gosselin, Martin le Marchant Hadsley (1847–1905), British diplomat. Third secretary at Berlin (1873); second secretary at St Petersburg (1874), Rome, St Petersburg (1880), and Berlin (1882); secretary of legation at Brussels (1885); secretary of embassy at Madrid (1892), and Berlin (1893); minister at Paris (1896); assistant under-secretary of state for Foreign Affairs (1898–1902); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary in Portugal (1902–1905). 49, 149–154, 159–159, 160–169, 174–177, 179–186, 187, 195–199
Granville, see Leveson-Gower, Granville George
Greene, William Conyngham (1854–1934), British diplomat. Third secretary at Stuttgart (1883); second secretary at Stuttgart (1887), The Hague (1889), Brussels (1891); secretary of legation at Teheran (1893); H.M.’s agent at Pretoria (1896); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berne (1901), Bucharest (1906), and Copenhagen (1911); ambassador to Tokyo (1912–1919). 434, 441n
Grierson, James (1859–1914), British army officer. Military attaché at Berlin (1896–1900). 194
Griesinger, Albert Julius Freiherr von (1836–1899), Württemberg civil servant. From 1883 private secretary to Karl I, then to Wilhelm II 435
Grillenberger, Karl (1848–1897), journalist and socialist politician from Nuremberg. Member of the Reichstag (1881–1897) and the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1892–1897). 535
Gröber, Adolf (1854–1919), jurist and politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1889–1919) and of the Reichstag (1887–1918). 432, 457–459
Grub, Friedrich (1833–1908), farmer, entrepreneur and Württemberg politician. Reichstag member (1887–1890). 432
Gruner, Hans (1865–1943), German explorer and colonist. From 1892 to 1914 colonial official in the German protectorate Togoland. 182, 187
Gudden, Bernhard von (1825–1886), psychiatrist and personal physician to King Ludwig II 19, 485–487
Guidi, Giovanni Battista (1852–1904), Catholic priest and diplomat of the Hoy See; uditore at Munich (1887). Secretary of state to Leo XIII (1890–1892); titular Archbishop of Stauropolis (1902). 505–506
Gurko, Iosif 231; see also Romeiko-Gurko, Count Iosif Vladimirovich
Haberkorn, Ludwig (1811–1901), Saxon jurist and politician. Mayor of Kamenz (1856) and Zittau (1857–1886); member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1849–1893; its president 1859–1870; 1875–1890); Reichstag member (1867). 266, 302
Hack, Theophil Friedrich von (1843–1911), head of the Stuttgart municipality (Stadtschultheiß) from 1872 to 1892; member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1882–1884). 428
Haffner, Paul Leopold (1829–1899), Catholic priest. Vicar general (1866–1877) and from 1886 Bishop of Mainz. From 1899 member of the first chamber of the Hessian Landtag. 228–229
Hahnke, Wilhelm von (1833–1912), Prussian general; chief of the military cabinet of the King of Prussia and German Emperor (1888–1901). 177
Hamed bin Mohammed el Murjebi (1832–1905), Swahili-Arab merchant and slave trader; known as Tippu Tip. Governor of the Stanley Falls District in the Congo Free State (1887–1891). 319
Hamilton, Lord George Francis (1845–1927), British statesman and politician. MP (1868–1906); first lord of the admiralty (1886–1892), secretary of state for India (1895–1903). 491
Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, Frederick (1826–1902), British diplomat and statesman; Irish peer. Created Earl of Dufferin in British peerage (1871) and Marquess of Dufferin and Ava (1888). Governor general of Canada (1872); ambassador to St Petersburg (1879), and Constantinople (1881); viceroy of India (1884); ambassador to Rome (1888) and Paris (1891–1896). 59, 151
Harcourt, Sir William Vernon (1827–1904), British statesman. MP (1868–1904); home secretary (1880–1885); chancellor of the exchequer (1886; 1892–1895). 60, 156, 160–161, 165, 222, 271
Hardinge, Arthur Henry (1859–1933), British diplomat. Consul general at Zanzibar (1894); commissioner of the East Africa Protectorate (1895); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Teheran (1900), Brussels (1906), and Lisbon (1911); ambassador to Madrid (1913–1919). 196–197n
Hartmann, Eduard von (1842–1906), German philosopher. 328
Hatzfeldt, Paul Graf von (1831–1901), German diplomat. Envoy extraordinary to Madrid (1874); ambassador to Constantinople (1878); secretary of state in the Berlin foreign office (1881); minister of state without portfolio (1882–1885); ambassador to London (1885–1901). 39, 51–53, 179n, 188–189, 199–201
Heine, Karl (1819–1888), entrepreneur and National Liberal politician from Leipzig. Member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1869–1888) and the Reichstag (1874–1877). 272
Heinrich (1862–1929), Prussian prince and German admiral. 40, 177, 209n, 548
Helena (1846–1923), Princess of the United Kingdom, third daughter of Queen Victoria. Married Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein in 1866. 40
Helmholtz, Hermann von (1821–1894), German physicist and physician. Professor of physiology at Königsberg (1849), Bonn (1855), and Heidelberg (1858); professor of physics at Berlin (1871). 361–362
Helyar, Horace Augustus (1853–1893), British diplomat. Third secretary at Madrid (1878) and The Hague (1879); second secretary at The Hague (1881) Washington (1884), St Petersburg (1888), and Munich (1890–1893). 249, 518, 526
Hendry, Donald (c.1854–1935), companion of Charles Woodcock; from 1879 to 1888 on continental tour in Europe; from 1883 at Stuttgart; from 1910 librarian at Pratt Institute Free Library in Brooklyn, New York. 436, 438
Heneage, Charles (1841–1901), British diplomat. Third secretary at the Hague (1867), and Munich (1869); second secretary at St Petersburg (1872–1874). 237
Heneage, Edward (1840–1922), British politician. MP (1865–1868; 1880–1892); Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (1886); 1st Baron Heneage (1896). 237
Herbette, Jules (1839–1901), French diplomat and foreign office official. Ambassador to Berlin (1886–1896). 81, 83, 133–134, 141, 161–16, 162, 178
Herbette, Marie Mathilde (b.1845), née Sibert. Married Jules Herbette in 1867. 133
Hermann (1825–1901), Prince of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach. Württemberg general. 428, 434
Hertling, Georg von (1843–1919), Catholic politician and statesman. Bavarian minister president (1912–1917); imperial chancellor and minister president of Prussia (1917–1918); member of the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1887–1891) and Reichstag (1875–1912). 543
Hertslet, Sir Edward (1824–1902), Foreign Office librarian and author of reference works. 160
Hervey, Henry (1832–1898), civil servant (Foreign Office). Junior clerk (1854); 1854; assistant clerk (1871); senior clerk (1877–1896). 293n, 297, 439
Heuduck, Wilhelm von (1821–1899), Prussian general. Commander of the XV imperial army corps at Strasbourg (1885–1890). 231
Hill, Sir Clement Lloyd (1845–1913), British diplomat and politician. Junior clerk (1867); acting second secretary at Munich (1875–1876); private secretary to the under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1885–1886); assistant clerk (1886); senior clerk (1894–1905); MP (1906–1913). 160n, 179n, 187, 196–197n
Hinzpeter, Georg Ernst (1827–1907), teacher. From 1867 tutor to Prince Wilhelm of Prussia (Wilhelm II); from 1904 member of the Prussian upper house. 115, 349
Hirsch, Maurice Baron de (1831–1896), financier and philanthropist based in Paris; originally from Planegg (Bavaria). Founder of the Oriental Railway and the Jewish Colonization Association. 482
Hirth, Georg (1841–1916), statistician, journalist, and publisher. Co-owner and from 1881 editor of the Münchner Neueste Nachrichten. 516
Hofmann, Johann (1842–1915), Württemberg farmer and politician. Schultheiß (executive official) of Igersheim (1905). 461
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, Chlodwig Fürst zu (1819–1901), German statesman. Member of the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1846–1876) and the Reichstag (1868–1881); Bavarian minister president (1866–1870); imperial ambassador to Paris (1874); governor general of Alsace-Lorraine (1885); Prussian minister president and imperial chancellor (1894–1900). 164–167, 174, 177, 182, 185, 195, 210, 213–214, 216, 231, 393, 398
Hohenthal und Bergen, Wilhelm Graf von (1853–1909), Saxon diplomat and statesman. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berlin (1885–1906); minister of the interior and of foreign affairs (1906–1909). 166, 370
Hoiningen-Huene, Karl Freiherr von (1837–1900), Prussian politician and estate owner. Member of Prussian upper house (1876–1895), the house of deputies (1877–1900), and the Reichstag (1880–1893). 147n, 529–530
Holles, see Pelham-Holles, Thomas
Holstein, Friedrich von (1837–1909), German diplomat and civil servant. Second secretary of embassy (1871) and secretary of legation (1872) at Paris; employed in the political department of the Berlin foreign office between 1876 and 1906. 155, 164–165
Hornig, Richard (1841–1911), equerry, private secretary and companion of Ludwig II of Bavaria. 469n–470, 476
Huene, see Hoiningen-Huene, Karl Freiherr von
Hunt, see Carew-Hunt, Henry Thomas
Iddesleigh, see Northcote, Stafford
Ißleib, Ferdinand (1838–1897), merchant from Berka. Business partner of August Bebel (1876–1884). 270
Itajubá, Marcos Antônio de Araújo e Abreu, barão de (1842–1897), Brazilian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary to Berlin (1891–1897). 156
Jackson, Richard (b.1846), assistant to the United States (US) consul in Stuttgart (1876–1881); from 1881 reader, court councillor and lover (until 1883) of King Karl of Württemberg; returned to the USA in 1893. 436–437
Jacobini, Lodovico (1832–1887), Italian cardinal from 1879. Apostolic nuncio to Austria (1874–1880) and cardinal secretary of state (1880–1887). 493–494, 496
Jagemann, Eugen von (1849–1926), Baden jurist and diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berlin (1893–1903). 166
Jameson, Sir Leander Starr (1853–1917), British colonial administrator and politician. Chief magistrate of Mashonaland (1891–1893); administrator of Matabeleland (Southern Rhodesia; 1894–1896); for his involvement in the raid against the South African Republic sentenced to fifteen months’ imprisonment (June 1896). From 1900 member of the assembly of the Cape Colony; prime minister of the Cape Colony (1904–1908). 171–173, 188–189, 190n, 192, 196n, 410, 413n, 545–547
Jarrys, Freiherr von La Roche, Max du (1834–1888), military officer. Marshal of the court of Prince Leopold of Bavaria. 497
Jocelyn, William Nassau (1832–1892), British diplomat. Secretary of legation at Stockholm (1868) and Berne (1873); secretary of embassy at Constantinople (1874–1878); chargé d'affaires to Hesse and Baden at Darmstadt (1878–1892). 19, 221–248, 249
Johann Albrecht (1857–1920), German prince. Regent of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1897–1901) and regent of the Duchy of Brunswick. (1907–1913); president of the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft (1895–1920). 181
Johnston, Sir Henry Hamilton (1858–1927), British explorer, diplomat, and colonial administrator. Consul in Mozambique (1889); commissioner and consul general for the British Central Africa Protectorate (1891); consul general at Tunis (1897); commissioner, commander in chief and consul general for the Uganda Protectorate (1999–1901). 196
Joost, Wilhelm (1860–1917), German business man and consul at Lourenço Marques (Maputo) (1893–1895). 180
Jöst, Franz (1851–1921), socialist politician. Member of the second chamber of the Grand Duchy of Hesse (1885–1896) and the Reichstag (1890–1896). 242
Kálnoky, Gusztáv Zsigmond gróf (1832–1898), Austro-Hungarian diplomat and statesman. Minister plenipotentiary and envoy extraordinary to Copenhagen (1874); ambassador to St Petersburg (1880); minister of foreign affairs (1881–1895). 76, 368–369
Kaltenborn-Stachau, Hans Karl von (1836–1898), Prussian general and statesman. Minister of war (1890–1893). 522
Karl Alexander (1818–1901), Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach from 1853. 262
Karl I (1823–1891), King of Württemberg from 1864. 7, 19–20, 428–429, 434–440, 442–443, 446–447, 450, 454
Katkov, Mikhail (1818–1887), Russian journalist and from 1863 editor of the Moskovskiye Vedomosti (Moscow News). 67, 82n, 288
Kaulbars, Nikolai Vasil‘evich (1842–1906), Russian general. Military attaché at Vienna (1881–1886); special mission to Sofia (1886). 70, 287–288
Kaulla, Max (1829–1906), lawyer from Stuttgart. 424
Kayser, Paul (1845–1898), German jurist and civil servant. From 1890 to 1896 head of the colonial section of the Berlin foreign office. 158, 160–161, 169, 196–199
Keller, Fritz von (1850–1923), forester and politician. President of the Württemberg Forstdirektion (1913–1920); Reichstag member (1887–1890). 432
Kemnitz, Hermann Friedrich Wilhelm von (1826–1900), German jurist. Mayor of Frankfurt an der Oder (1871–1894). 106
Kennedy, Charles M. (1831–1908), civil servant (Foreign Office). Later senior clerk at the Commercial and Sanitary Department (1872–1894). 300, 336
Khalid Bin Barghash Al-Busa'Idi (1874–1927), Sultan of Zanzibar (25–27 August 1886). 200, 205
Kilian, Fritz (b. c.1849), German subject; arrested at Nice in 1888 for espionage. 438
Kimberley, see Wodehouse, John
Kirk, Sir John (1832–1922), Scottish physician, explorer, and diplomat. Consul general at Zanzibar (1880–1887). 197
Klein, Albert (1836–1902), pharmacist and National Liberal politician. Member of the second chamber of the Baden Landtag (1891–1894). 256–257
Klein, Tobias (dates unknown), salesman from Strasbourg. In 1887 sentenced to six years’ imprisonment for treason against Germany. 86n, 88
Kloß, Karl (1847–1908), carpenter, unionist and socialist politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1895–1908), and the Reichstag (1890–1903). 444, 461
Knoop, Wilhelm (1836–1913), German banker, philanthropist. US vice consul at Dresden. 299
Kochetov, Evgenii L‘vovich (1845–1905), Russian journalist. Berlin correspondent for the Novoye Vremya. 350
Köller, Ernst von (1841–1928), Prussian civil servant and politican. Under-secretary of state in the imperial ministry for Alsace-Lorraine (1889); Prussian minister of the interior (1894–1895); Oberpräsident of Schleswig-Holstein (1897); imperial state secretary for Alsace-Lorraine (1901–1908). Reichstag member (1881–1889). 164, 185–186, 397
Königsmarck, Carl Graf von (1839–1910), Prussian estate owner. Member of the Reichstag of the North German Confederation (1867) and the Prussian upper house (from 1877). 40
Könneritz, Léonçe Robert Freiherr von (1835–1890), Saxon landowner and statesman. Member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1866–1876) and the Reichstag (1874–1877); Oberhofmarschall (1873–1891); Kreishauptmann of Zwickau (1874) and Leipzig (1876); minister of finance (1876–1890). 339
Krementz, Philipp (1819–1899), Archbishop of Cologne (1885–1899). Created cardinal in 1893. 479–480
Kruger, Paul (1825–1904), South African politician. Member of the executive triumvirate (1881–1883) and president of the South African Republic (Transvaal) (1883–1900); from 1900 in exile. 15, 18, 171n, 172n, 181, 190–193, 412–413, 546
Kusserow, Heinrich von (1836–1900), Prussian diplomat. Secretary of legation at Washington (1865–1868); Legationsrat in the Berlin foreign office (1874); Prussian envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Hamburg (1885–1890); Reichstag member (1871–1874). 49
Labouchère, Henry Du Pré (1831–1912), English journalist, writer, politician. Attaché at Washington, Munich, Stockholm, Frankfurt, St Petersburg, and Dresden (1854–1862); second secretary at Constantinople (1862–1863); MP (1865–1868; 1880–1906). 361
Ladenburg, Ferdinand (1835–1899), German banker. From 1884 British vice consul at Mannheim. 237
Lascelles, Sir Frank Cavendish (1841–1920), British diplomat. Consul general at Cairo (1879) and Sofia (1879); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Bucharest (1887) and Teheran (1891); ambassador to St Petersburg (1894) and Berlin (1895–1908). 9–10, 18, 187–195, 197n, 199–217
Lassalle, Ferdinand (1825–1864), socialist politician and writer. Founding president of the Allgemeiner Deutscher Arbeiterverein (1863). 279
Launay, Edoardo de (1820–1892), Italian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berlin (1853–1861 for Sardinia; 1861–1864; 1867–1892) and St Petersburg (1864–1867); from 1875 ambassador to Berlin. 40, 103
Leemann, Julius (1845–1905), farmer and politician. From 1891 professor for agriculture at Tübingen. Member of the of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1888–1891) and of the Reichstag (1884–1891). 432
Lefebvre de Béhaine, Édouard Alphonse, comte de (1829–1897), French diplomat. Chargé d'affaires at Munich (1871); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at The Hague (1880); ambassador to the Holy See (1882). 510
Leipziger, Adolf Hilmar von (1825–1891), Prussian civil servant. Oberpräsident of the Prussian province of Hanover (1878) and of the province of West Prussia (1888–1891). 110
Leo XIII (1810–1903), born Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi Pecci. Pope from 1878. 79–80, 137–138, 480, 482, 488, 493–497, 503, 505–506, 512, 515, 528, 542–543
Leonrod, Leopold Freiherr von (1829–1905), Bavarian jurist and minister of justice (1887–1902). 517
Leopold (1846–1930), Prince of Bavaria. German army officer. 497, 525
Leopold II (1835–1909), King of the Belgians from 1865. 150, 160, 212
Lerchenfeld-Köfering, Hugo Graf von und zu (1843–1925), Bavarian diplomat. Chargé d'affaires at Paris (1871) and Vienna (1876); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berlin (1880–1918). 165–166, 484, 520, 549
Leszczynski, Paul von (1830–1918), Prussian general. Commander of the IX imperial army corps (1888–1891). 132
Leveson-Gower, Granville George (1815–1891), 2nd Earl Granville (1846), British statesman. MP (1837–1846); foreign secretary (1851–1852; 1870–1874; 1880–1885); lord president of the council (1852–1866 with interruptions in 1854–1855 and 1858–1859); colonial secretary (1868–1870). 33–53, 221–226, 265–276, 284n, 295, 423–427, 467–475
Levetzow, Albert von (1827–1903), German jurist and conservative politician. Reichstag member (1867–1871; 1877–1903); its president (1881–1885; 1888–1895); from 1890 member of the Prussian upper house. 174–176
Lieber, Ernst (1838–1902), German politician and co-founder of the Catholic Zentrum party. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1870–1902) and the Reichstag (1871–1902). 216
Liebermann von Sonnenberg, Max (1848–1911), German army officer, politician and anti-Semitic publicist. Reichstag member (1890–1907). 196
Liebermeister, Carl (1833–1901), German physician. From 1871 professor at the university of Tübingen. 436, 438
Liebknecht, Wilhelm (1826–1900), socialist politician. After the failed Baden revolution of 1848–1849 went into exile in Switzerland and then England (1850–1862); returned to Germany 1862; member of the Reichstag (1867–1871; 1874–1900), and the Saxon second chamber (1879–1886; 1889–1892). 50, 223, 233, 266–272, 279, 302, 345, 389, 397
Limpöck, Klementine Freiin von (1837–1900), lady in waiting to Archduchess Gisela. 497
Lister, Thomas Villiers (1832–1902), civil servant (Foreign Office). Assistant under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1873–1893). 34, 86, 236–237, 297, 360–361, 425, 428, 442, 517
Louis Viereck (1851–1922), socialist journalist and politician. Reichstag member (1884–1887); emigrated to the USA in 1896. 272
Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rosenberg, Karl Fürst zu (1834–1921), Catholic politician, friar and priest (from 1908). Hereditary member of the first chambers of Bavaria (1856), Baden (1860), Württemberg (1861), and Hesse (1863); president of the central committee of German Catholics (1868) and co-founder of the Zentrum party (1870). Reichstag member (1871–1872). 80
Lucanus, Hermann von (1831–1908), Prussian civil servant; chief of the privy council (Geheimes Zivilkabinett) of Wilhelm II (1888–1908). 177
Lüderitz, Adolf (1834–1886), German merchant and colonist in South West Africa. 34n, 36n, 40–41
Ludwig I (1786–1868), King of Bavaria (1825–1848). 483
Ludwig II (1845–1886), King of Bavaria from 1864. 19, 469–470, 474, 480–488, 499n, 504, 514, 519–520
Ludwig III (1845–1921), Bavarian prince. Prince regent (1912–1913); reigned as last King of Bavaria (1913–1918). 481, 511, 548
Ludwig III (1806–1877), Grand Duke of Hesse-Darmstadt from 1848. 518
Ludwig IV (1837–1892), Grand Duke of Hesse-Darmstadt from 1877. 243–245, 249, 254, 259
Luise (1838–1923), Prussian princess. Grand Duchess of Baden from 1856. 261n–262
Luitpold (1821–1912), Prince of Bavaria. Prince regent from 1886. 352, 469–470n, 481, 484–485n, 488–489, 498–500, 504–506, 508–511, 513n–517, 519–520, 523, 525, 542–543, 551
Lutz, Johann (1826–1890), Bavarian statesman. Minister of justice (1867–1871) and of cultural affairs (1869–1880); head of the council of ministers (1880–1890); ennobled in 1880 and given the title Freiherr in 1883. 476, 488–489, 504, 511–515, 519
Lyons, Richard Bickerton Pemell (1817–1887), British diplomat. Baron Lyons (1858), created Viscount Lyons (1881); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Washington (1858–1865), ambassador to France (1867–1887). 10, 64, 82
Lytton, see Bulwer-Lytton, Edward Robert
Macaulay, Thomas Babington (1800–1859), British historian and politician. MP (1830–1847; 1852–1856); secretary at war (1839–1841); created 1st Baron Macaulay (1857). 309
MacDonell, Sir Hugh Guion (1832–1904), British diplomat. Secretary of embassy at Berlin (1875) and Rome (1878); chargé d'affaires at Munich (1882); envoy extraordinary to Rio de Janeiro (1885), Copenhagen (1888), and Lisbon (1893–1902). 8, 55, 181, 467–480
Mackenzie, Sir Morell (1837–1892), British physician. 18, 112, 305, 316–317, 500, 503
Malcolm, Ian Zachary (1868–1944), British diplomat and politician. Honorary attaché at Berlin (1891–1893) and Paris (1893); assistant private secretary to the secretary of state, Salisbury, (1895–1898); MP (1895–1906; 1910–1919). 151
Malet, Sir Edward Baldwin (1837–1908), British diplomat. Secretary of legation at Peking (1871), Athens (1873), and Rome (1875); secretary of embassy at Rome (1876) and Constantinople; consul general in Egypt (1879); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Brussels (1883); ambassador to Berlin (1884–1895). 9–10, 13, 15–16, 21, 41–47, 48–49, 53–54, 61, 65–80, 82, 84–86, 91, 93–106, 110–111, 114–117, 119–128, 131–140, 143–145, 147–149, 151–152, 154–159, 161–162, 169–173, 177–179, 180–181, 287, 326–327, 490
Malsen, Ludwig Freiherr von (1828–1895), Bavarian diplomat and court official. Oberhofmarschall from 1868. 486
Maltzahn, Helmuth Freiherr von (1840–1923), Prussian statesman. State secretary in the imperial treasury (1888–1893); Oberpräsident of the province of Pommerania (1810–1911). Reichstag member (1871–1888). 241
Mann, Tom (1856–1941), British trades unionist, socialist politician and activist. 203, 417
Manteuffel, Edwin Freiherr von (1809–1885), Prussian general. Military governor of Schleswig (1864); commander during the Austro-Prussian War and the Franco-Prussian War; governor general of Alsace-Lorraine (1879–1885). 276–277
Margherita (1851–1926), Princess of Savoy. Queen consort of Italy (1878–1900). 141, 155n
Maria Alexandrovna (1849–1926), née von Adlerberg. Married Niko Dadiani. 71
Marie (1825–1889), Princess of Prussia. Married Maximilian of Bavaria in 1842, Queen of Bavaria from 1848. 486, 508–509
Marie (1849–1922), Princess of Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach. Married Prinz Heinrich VII Reuß zu Köstritz in 1876. 384
Marschall von Bieberstein, Adolf Freiherr (1842–1912), jurist and diplomat. Baden envoy to Berlin and plenipotentiary at the Federal Council (1883–1890); imperial state secretary for foreign affairs (1890–1897); German ambassador to Constantinople (1897) and London (1912). Member of the first chamber of the Baden Landtag (1875–1883) and the Reichstag (1878–1881). 16, 18, 128–130, 133, 135, 140–141, 143–144, 151, 153–157, 159, 169–173, 179–181, 186, 188–196, 203–205, 207, 211, 213–214, 217n, 238n, 413–414
Mason, Joseph T. (dates unknown), US consul in Dresden (1876–c.1889). 299
Mathilde (1843–1878), Princess of Bavaria. Married Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine in 1833, Grand Duchess of Hesse from 1848. 244
Matthews, Henry (1826–1913), British lawyer, politician, and statesman. MP (1868–1874; 1886–1895); secretary of state for the home department (1886–1892); raised to peerage as Viscount Llandaff (1895). 125, 301, 347
Maximilian I Joseph (1756–1825), Duke of Pfalz-Zweibrücken (1795), Prince-Elector of Bavaria (1799). King of Bavaria (1806). 503–504
Maximilian II (1811–1864), King of Bavaria from 1848. 483, 504
Maybach, Albert von (1822–1904), Prussian railway official and statesman. President of the imperial railway office; imperial under-secretary of state (1877); Prussian minister of commerce and public works (1878–1891); member of the Prussian house of deputies (1882–1888; 1890–1893). 121, 224–226
Mechow, Friedrich Wilhelm Alexander von (1831–1890), Prussian military officer, naturalist and explorer of Africa. 34
Meier, Ernst Julius (1828–1897), Saxon theologian. Superintendent (1867) and court chaplain (1890) at Dresden. 293
Melchers, Paulus (1813–1895), Archbishop of Cologne (1866). Exiled to the Netherlands (1875); cardinal priest in Rome (1885). 479–480
Merensky, Alexander (1837–1918), German physician and missionary of the Berlin Missionary Society; from 1859 to 1882 active in South Africa; inspector of the Berlin city mission (1883); from 1891 to 1893 in Eastern Africa. 35
Metz, Ignatz (1829–1909), lawyer at Darmstadt and National Liberal politician. Member of the second chamber of the Hessian Landtag (1878–1896). 255
Metzsch, Georg von (1836–1927), Saxon statesman. Minister of the interior (1891–1906), foreign minister (1894–1906), and minister president (1901–1906); member of the first chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1907–1918). 369, 374, 399–402, 407, 418
Meunier, V.J.A. (dates unknown), French army officer. Military attaché at Berlin (1890–1894). 150
Michie, Alexander (1833–1902), British merchant, writer and journalist. Times special correspondent at Tientsin (1883–1894). 202–203
Mill, John Stuart (1806–1873), English philosopher and economist. 360
Minghetti, Marco (1818–1886), Italian statesman. Prime minister of Italy (1863–1864; 1873–1876). 154
Miquel, Johannes von (1828–1901), jurist, National Liberal politician and Prussian statesman. Mayor of Osnabrück (1865–1870; 1876–1880) and Frankfurt am Main (1880–1890); Prussian minister of finance (1890–1901). Member of the second chamber of the Hanoverian Landtag (1864–1866), the Prussian house of deputies (1867–1877), the upper house (1882–1890; 1901), and the Reichstag (1867–1877; 1887–1890). 146, 233
Mirbach-Sorquitten, Julius von (1839–1921), jurist, estate owner and conservative politician. Member of the Prussian upper house (1874–1918) and the Reichstag (1878–1881; 1886–1898). 371
Mittnacht, Hermann Freiherr von (1825–1909), Württemberg jurist and statesman. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1861–1900); minister of justice (1867–1878), foreign minister (1873–1900) and minister president (1876–1900). 431, 437, 439–440, 442, 450–453, 456–458, 460–462, 468
Möbius, Kurt (dates unknown), secretary at the German general consulate in London. 36
Moeller, Eduard von (1814–1880), Prussian civil servant. Oberpräsident of Hesse Nassau (1867) and Alsace-Lorriane (1871–1879), 276–277
Mohrenheim, Arthur Pavlovich (1824–1906), Russian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Copenhagen (1867–1882); ambassador to London (1882–1884) and Paris (1884–1897). 533
Moltke, Helmuth Graf von (1800–1891), Prussian general. Chief of staff of the Prussian army (1858–1888); member of the Reichstag (1867–1891) and the Prussian upper house (1872). 131, 428, 490
Moltke, Helmuth Johannes von (1848–1916), Prussian general; aide-de-camp to Wilhem II (1891); chief of the imperial general staff (1906–1914). 384
Mommsen, Theodor (1817–1903), historian, classical scholar, and politician. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1863–1866; 1873–1879) and the Reichstag (1881–1884); Nobel laureate in literature (1902). 323
Monson, Sir Edmund (1834–1909), British diplomat. Consul general and minister resident at Montevideo (1879); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Buenos Aires (1879), Copenhagen (1884), Athens (1888), and Brussels (1892); ambassador to Vienna (1893) and Paris (1896–1905). 10, 64
Morier, Sir Robert Burnett David (1826–1893), British diplomat. Attaché at Vienna (1853) and Berlin (1858); second secretary at Berlin (1862); secretary of legation at Athens (1865), Frankfurt (1866), and Darmstadt (1866); chargé d'affaires at Stuttgart (1871) and Munich (1872); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Lisbon (1876) and Madrid (1881); ambassador to Russia (1884–1893). 9, 18, 93, 114–115, 322, 364, 509–510
Moser, Rudolf von (1840–1909), Württemberg diplomat and civil servant. Deputy plenipotentiary (1875–1879; 1882–1890) and plenipotentiary (1890–1894) at the Federal Council; from 1890 also envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berlin. 452–455
Mostyn, Hubert George Charles (1860–1935), 7th Baron Vaux of Harrowden (1883), British diplomat. Third secretary at Stuttgart (1889); second secretary at Stuttgart (1891; also acted as chargé d'affaires at Darmstadt in 1891 and in 1892), at Belgrade (1892), Berne (1893), and Brussels (1895–1898). 442, 445–447
Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar (1853–1907), Qajar shah of Iran from 1897. 261
Mpande kaSenzangakhona (1798–1872), king of the Zulu people (1840–1872). 46
Muhi-ud-Din Muhammad (1618–1707), known as Aurangzeb, Mughal emperor (1658–1707) 326
Müller, August (1825–1877), Württemberg village official (Schultheiß) in Güglingen. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1861–1862). 441
Müller, Franz (1840–1864), German tailor; convicted murderer of Thomas Briggs. 501–502
Müller, Franz Carl (1860–1913), psychiatrist and personal physician to Prince Otto of Bavaria. 486
Müller, Gottlieb von (1816–1897), Priest and prelate from Stuttgart. 441
Müller, Martin (b. c.1854), would-be assassin of Prince Wilhelm of Württemberg. 441–442
Münster, Georg Herbert Graf zu (1820–1902), German diplomat. Hanoverian envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at St Petersburg (1856–1865); imperial ambassador to London (1873) and Paris (1885–1900). Member of the first chamber of the Hanoverian Landtag (1846–1866), the Reichstag (1867–1874), and the Prussian upper house (1867–1902). 36, 43, 45–46, 48, 116, 134, 274
Murad I (1326–1389), Ottoman Sultan from 1362 to 1389. 326
Muraviev, Mikhail Nikolaevich (1845–1900), Russian diplomat and statesman. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Copenhagen (1893–1896); foreign minister (1897–1900). 154
Nachtigal, Gustav (1834–1885), German physician, explorer, and colonist. Consul general at Tunis (1882); imperial commissioner for West Africa (1884). 13, 35–36, 45n, 50
Napoleon I (1769–1821), Emperor of the French (1804–1814; 1815). 244, 303, 342n
Napoleon III (1808–1873), Charles Louis, later Louis Napoléon Bonaparte. President of the French Second Republic (1848–1851); assumed dictatorial powers in December 1851; Emperor of the French (1852–1870). 42
Natal‘ia Obrenovich (1859–1941), née Keschko; known as Natalie of Serbia. As wife of Milan I, Princess consort (1875) and Queen consort (1882–1889) of Serbia. 110–111
Ndumbé Lobé Bell (1839–1897), also known as King Bell; leader of the Duala people (South Cameroon) from 1858, businessman, and politician. 275
Neipperg, Reinhard von (1856–1919), estate owner and politician. Member of the first chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1880–1887) and the Reichstag (1881–1890). 432
Nelson, Horatio (1758–1805), British admiral. 1st Viscount Nelson (1801). 411, 442
Neurath, Konstantin Sebastian Freiherr von (1847–1912), jurist, estate owner and Württemberg politician. Member of the Reichstag (1881–1890). 432
Newcastle, see Pelham-Holles, Thomas
Nicholas II (1868–1918), Tsar of Russia (1894–1917). 18–19, 183, 259–262, 415–416
Niko I Dadiani (1846–1903), last Prince of Mingrelia (Samegrelo) from 1853 to 1867. 71
Northcote, Stafford (1818–1887), British statesman and politician. MP (1855–1885); president of the Board of Trade (1866–1867), secretary of state for India (1867–1868); chancellor of the exchequer (1874–1880); first lord of the treasury (1885–1886); 1st Earl of Iddesleigh from 1885; foreign secretary (1886–1887). 56, 57, 65–73, 229–231, 278–279, 285–288, 293n, 475, 490–492
Nostitz-Wallwitz, Hermann von (1826–1906), Saxon statesman. Minister of the interior (1866–1891), the royal house (1869–1871; 1882–1895), and foreign affairs (1876–1882); member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1857–1866) and the Reichstag (1874–1877). 268–270, 291–292, 300–301
Nostitz-Wallwitz, Oswald von (1830–1885), Saxon diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berlin (1873–1885). 33, 467
Novalis (1772–1801), German poet and author. 304
Olga (1869–1924), Princess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach. 434
Ol‘ga Nikolaievna (1822–1892), Grand Duchess of Russia. Married Karl of Württemberg in 1846, Queen Olga of Württemberg from 1864. 428–429, 434, 445, 450
Oppenheimer, Sir Charles (1836–1900), merchant and British consular agent. Consul (1880) and consul general (1882–1900) at Frankfurt. 227–228
Orterer, Georg (1849–1916), Bavarian teacher and Catholic politician. Member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1883–1916; from 1899 its president) and the Reichstag (1884–1892); styled Ritter von Orterer (1901). 516–517, 545
Osten-Sacken, Nikolai von der (1831–1912), Russian diplomat. Minister resident at Darmstadt (1870); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Munich (1880); ambassador to Berlin (1895–1912). 204
Otto (1848–1916), King of Bavaria (1886–1913). 470n, 485, 489, 498–500, 520
Ow-Wachendorf, Hans Freiherr von (1843–1921), estate owner, civil servant and politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1876–1906) and the Reichstag (1878–1890). 432
Paasche, Hermann (1851–1925), German statistician, economist, and politician. Member of the Reichstag (1881–1884; 1893–1918). 417
Palmerston, Henry John Temple (1784–1865), 3rd Viscount Palmerston (1802), British statesman. MP (1807–1865); secretary at war (1809–1828); foreign secretary (1830–1841; 1846–1851); home secretary (1851); prime minister (1855–1858; 1859–1865). 286
Parnell, Charles Stewart (1846–1891), Irish politician. MP (1875–1891), leader of the Home Rule League (1880) and the Irish National Land League (1882). 299, 345
Pasteur, Jean Baptiste (1851–1908), French diplomat. Secretary of legation at Copenhagen (1891–1894). 154
Pauncefote, Julian (1828–1902), British diplomat. Assistant under-secretary of state for the colonies (1874) and foreign affairs (1876); permanent under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1882); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary (1889) and ambassador to the United States of America (1893); created 1st Baron Pauncefote (1899). 234, 277, 279, 293n, 295, 423, 480, 486, 493, 497
Payer, Friedrich von (1847–1931), lawyer and democratic politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1894–1912) and the Reichstag (1877–1878; 1880–1887; 1890–1917). 444, 458, 461
Peel, Sir Robert (1788–1850), British statesman. MP (1809–1850); home secretary (1821–1830); prime minister (1834–1835; 1841–1846). 289, 343
Pelham-Holles, Thomas (1693–1768), Duke of Newcastle upon Tyne, British statesman. Prime minister (1754–1756; 1757–1762); 1st Duke of Newcastle under Lyme. 364
Pergler von Perglas, Maximilian Joseph (1817–1893), Bavarian diplomat. Minister resident at Athens (1847) and Hanover (1854); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at St Petersburg (1860), Paris (1866), and Berlin (1868–1877; from 1870 also plenipotentiary at the Federal Council); from 1877 royal chamberlain (with duties of master of ceremonies). 510
Peter, Clemens (died 1891), priest at the Dresden Johanneskirche. 293
Peters, Carl (1856–1918), German explorer, politician, and colonist. Founder of the Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft (1884); imperial high commissioner for the Kilimanjaro Region (1891–1892); for his cruel treatment of the local people dismissed from his post at the Imperial Colonial Office for misuse of official power (1897); until 1914 resident in England. 34–35, 182, 318–319, 335–336
Pfeil, Markus Graf (1859–1916), German consular official. Vice consul and commissary consul at Lourenço Marques (1895–1897); consul at Bombay (1898–1903) and Kiev (1903–1905). 180
Pfister, Philipp (1832–1889), Bavarian civil servant. Court secretary to Ludwig II (1884). 469, 476
Pfisterer, Georg Philipp (1837–1915), farmer and anti-Semitic politician. Member of the second chamber of the Baden Landtag (1895–1899). 256–257
Pfretzschner, Adolph Freiherr von (1820–1901), Bavarian statesman. Minister of trade (1865–1866) and finances (1866–1872); minister president and minister of foreign affairs (1872–1880); member of the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1872–1897). 510
Pickard, Benjamin (1842–1904), British coal miner, politician and trades unionist. MP (1885–1904). 389
Pickenbach, Wilhelm (1850–1903), businessman and politician. Co-founder of the Deutscher Antisemiten-Bund (1884). Reichstag member (1890–1893). 243
Pietro, Angelo Di (1828–1914), apostolic nuncio to Munich (1882) and Madrid (1887). Cardinal (1893) and prefect of the Congregation of the Council (1893–1895). 493–494, 496–497
Pitt, William (1708–1778), known as Pitt the elder, British statesmam. Prime minister (1766–1768); 1st Earl of Chatham (1866). 326, 364
Pitt, William (1759–1806), known as Pitt the younger, British statesman. Prime minister (1783–1801; 1804–1806). 286, 289, 364
Pius VII (1742–1823), born Gregorio Barnaba Chiaramonti. Cardinal 1785; pope from 1800. 503
Pius IX (1792–1878), born Giovanni Maria Mastai-Ferretti. Pope from 1846. 80
Plessen, Ludwig Freiherr von (1848–1929), German and Prussian diplomat. Secretary of embassy at St Petersburg (1883), Vienna (1884), and London (1884); consul general at Budapest (1888–1890); envoy extraordinary and minister at Athens (1894–1902); Prussian envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Darmstadt (1890–1894) and Stuttgart (1902–1907). 41, 170
Polignac, Jules de (1780–1847), French diplomat and statesman. Minister president (1829–1830). 289
Pollock, Sir Jonathan Frederick (1783–1870), British lawyer, judge, and politician. MP (1831–1844); attorney general (1834–1835; 1841–1844); chief baron of the exchequer (1844–1866); 1st baronet (1866). 502
Poppe, Johannes (dates unknown), journalist and editor of the Dresdner Journal. 407–408
Powerscourt, see Wingfield, Mervyn
Preißer, Max (1853–1925), carpenter and socialist agitator from Lindendau. 270
Preysing-Lichtenegg-Moos, Conrad Graf von (1843–1900), Bavarian nobleman and Catholic politician. Member of the Reichstag (1871–1893; 1900–1903) and the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag from 1881. 542
Primrose, Archibald (1847–1929), 5th Earl of Rosebery (1868), British statesman. Lord privy seal (1885); foreign secretary (1886; 1892–1894); prime minister (1894–1895); created Earl of Midlothian (1911). 17, 63–64, 142n, 143–156, 169n, 228–229, 249–250, 282–284, 327n, 368–386, 387, 396, 401, 429–431, 448–456, 483–489, 527–533
Puttkamer, Robert von (1828–1900), Prussian statesman. Member of the Reichstag (1874–1884; 1890–1891), the Prussian house of deputies (1879–1885), and the upper house (from 1889); Oberpräsident of Silesia (1877) and Pomerania (1891–1899); minister of cultural affairs (1879–1881) and of the interior (1881–1888). 57n, 109–110
Quidde, Ludwig (1858–1941), German historian, liberal politician and pacifist. Executive secretary of the Prussian Historical Station at Rome (1890–1892); member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1907–1918) and the Weimar National Assembly (1919); Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1927); emigrated to Switzerland (1933). 537–538
Racke, Nicola (1847–1908), wine merchant and Catholic politician. Member of the second chamber of the Hessian Landtag (1875–1893) and the Reichstag (1884–1890). 242
Radolin, Hugo Graf von (1841–1917), Prussian and German diplomat. Secretary of legation at Dresden (1874–1876); secretary of embassy at Constantinople (1876–1881); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Weimar (1882–1884) and at Constantinople (1892–1894); ambassador to St Petersburg (1895–1900) and Paris (1901–1910). Oberhofmarschall to Friedrich Wilhelm (Friedrich III) and Princess Victoria (1884–1888). 40
Radziwill, Anton von (1833–1904), Prussian general. Adjutant general and aide-de-camp to Wilhelm I and Friedrich III 40
Raesfeldt, Ferdinand von (1835–1914), civil servant in the Bavarian ministry for finance; deputy plenipotentiary at the Federal Council (1877–1884; in 1880 plenipotentiary). 34
Ranke, Leopold von (1794–1886), German historian. 304
Ratzinger, Georg (1844–1899), Catholic priest, publicist and politician. Member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1875–1881; 1893–1899) and the Reichstag (1877–1878; 1893–1899). 549–550
Rauchenecker, Johann (1853–1903), brewery owner and Catholic politician. Member of the Reichstag (1892–1893). 528
Reichardt, Julius (1826–1898), publisher and founding editor of the Dresdner Nachrichten. 307, 321
Reuter, Paul Julius Freiherr von (1816–1899), entrepreneur, journalist, and founder of Reuter's Telegram Company. Naturalized British subject (1857). 59–60
Rhodes, Cecil (1853–1902), British business man, colonist and South African politician. Founder of the British South Africa Company (1889); prime minister of the Cape Colony (1890–1896). 170–173, 180, 192, 546
Ribot, Alexandre (1842–1923), French statesman. Prime minister (1892–1893; 1895; 1914; 1917); minister of foreign affairs (1890–1893; 1917), of the interior (1893), of finance (1895; 1914–1917), and of justice (1914). 523
Richard I (1157–1199), King of England from 1189. 370
Richter, Eugen (1838–1906), publicist and liberal politician. Member of the Reichstag (1867–1906) and the Prussian house of deputies (1869–1905). 50, 97, 214, 216, 299, 310–311, 316, 389
Rickert, Heinrich (1833–1902), journalist and liberal politician. Member of the Reichstag (1874–1903) and the Prussian house of deputies (1870–1902). 389
Riecke, Karl von (1830–1898), civil servant and Württemberg statesman. Head of the Württemberg statistical bureau (1873–1880) and the Steuerkollegium (1880–1891); minister of finance (1891–1898); plenipotentiary at the Federal Council (1871–1872; 1892–1898); member of the first chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1872–1891). 461
Riedel, Emil von (1832–1906), Bavarian jurist and statesman. Minister of finance (1877–1904). 483, 514
Ripon, see Robinson, George
Robertson, Charles Boyd (d.1905), British diplomat and civil servant (Foreign Office). Acting third secretary at Washington (1871); acting second secretary at Stuttgart (1879); acting assistant clerk (1882); assistant clerk (1882); superintendent of the treaty department (1894–1903). 152, 312
Robinson, George (1827–1909), Earl de Grey and Earl of Ripon (1859), British statesman. Secretary of state for war (1863–1866), for India (1866), and for the colonies (1892–1895); lord privy seal (1905–1908); 1st Marquess of Ripon (1871). 171
Robinson, Sir Hercules (1824–1897), British colonial administrator. Governor of Hong Kong (1859), British Ceylon (1865), New South Wales (1872), Fiji (1874), and New Zealand (1879); high commissioner for Southern Africa and governor of the Cape Colony (1881–1889; 1895–1897); created 1st Baron Rosmead (1896). 37
Robinson, Sir Thomas (1703–1777), English politician and architect. 326
Romeiko-Gurko, Count Iosif Vladimirovich (1828–1901), Russian field marshal. Governor of St Petersburg (1879–1880); governor general of Poland (1883–1894). 231
Roos, Johann Christian (1828–1896), Catholic priest. Bishop of Limburg (1885); Archbishop of Freiburg (1886). 235, 242
Rosebery, see Primrose, Archibald
Rößler, Constantin (1820–1896), German publicist and journalist. From 1877 head of the Prussian Literarisches Büro; secretary of legation in the Prussian ministry of foreign affairs (1892–1894). 309, 394, 537
Rotenhan, Wolfram Freiherr von (1845–1912), German diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Buenos Aires (1884–1890), Berne (1897), and the Holy See (1897–1907); under-secretary of state in the Berlin foreign office (1890). 149–150, 213
Rudini, see Starabba, Antonio
Ruffo-Scilla, Fulco Luigi (1840–1895), Catholic priest and apostolic nuncio to Munich (1887–1889); elevated to cardinal in 1891. 505
Russell, Emily (1843–1927), née Villier; British courtier. Married Odo Russell in 1868; Baroness Ampthill (1881). 38–40
Russell, Francis Shirley (1840–1912), British army officer. Military attaché at Berlin (1889–1891). 119
Russell, Odo (1829–1884), British diplomat. Attaché at Paris, Vienna, Constantinople, Washington, and Naples; from 1860 on special service at Rome (as unaccredited envoy to the Holy See); on special mission to the German headquarters at Versailles (November 1870–March 1871); ambassador to Berlin (1871–1884); styled Lord Odo Russell from 1872, created Baron Ampthill (1881). 08–10, 13–15, 25n, 33–37, 38–40, 49
Safferling, Benignus von (1836–1898), Bavarian general and statesman; minister of war (1890–1893). 522
Said Pasha Kurd (1834–1907), Ottoman statesman and diplomat. Governor general of the Archipelago (1881); minister of foreign affairs (1882; 1885–1896); ambassador to Berlin (1883–1885). 53
Saldern, Conrad von (1847–1908), German diplomat. Acting consul in Ragusa (1882) and acting consul general in Sofia (1884); temporarily in charge of the imperial legation at Tangier (1887); acting consul general at Warsaw (1887) and Odessa (1888); consul at Tbilisi (1889), Basel (1893), and Stockholm (1897). Minister resident in Bangkok (1899) and Seoul (1903–1906). 230
Salfeld, Siegmund (1843–1926), German rabbi and scholar. Preacher at Dessau (1870); rabbi in Dessau (1878) and Mainz (1880). 243
Salisbury, Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil (1830–1903), 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1868), British statesman. MP (1853–1868); secretary of state for India (1866–1867; 1874–1878); secretary of state for foreign affairs (1878–1880; 1885–1886; 1887–1892; 1895–1900); prime minister (1885–1886; 1886–1892; 1895–1902). 54–63, 65, 73n, 75–143, 170, 179–217, 226–228, 231–248, 256–262, 284, 288–368, 368n, 380, 401–419, 427–447, 462–463, 475–483, 493–526
Sanderson, Thomas Henry (1841–1923), civil servant (Foreign Office). Junior clerk (1859); private secretary to the foreign secretary (1866–1868; 1874–1878; 1880–1885); assistant clerk (1876); senior clerk (1885); assistant under-secretary (1889), then permanent under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1894–1906); created Baron Sanderson (1905). 76, 144, 340n, 358, 381n, 385, 403, 462, 519, 523
Sarwey, Otto von (1825–1900), Württemberg civil servant and statesman. Minister for church and school affairs (1885–1900); member of the Württemberg Landtag (1856–1864; 1866–1876) and the Reichstag (1874–1876). 426
Schäffle, Albert (1831–1903), political economist. Professor at the universities of Tübingen (1860) and Vienna (1868); Austrian minister for trade (February to October 1871), then publicist in Stuttgart; member of the Württemberg Landtag (1862–1865). 269, 551–552
Schauß, Friedrich von (1831–1893), jurist, banker and National Liberal politician. Member of the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1869–1892) and the Reichstag (1871–1881). 507–508
Schickert, Paul (1827–1906), Saxon railway official and politician. Stadtrat in Dresden and member of the Landtag (1888–1894). 333
Schiller, Friedrich (1759–1805), German poet and playwright. 538
Schippel, Max (1859–1928), Saxon journalist and socialist politician. Professor for Staatswissenschaften at Dresden (1923–1928); Reichstag member (1890–1905). 345
Schmidt, Reinhardt (1838–1909), German businessman and liberal politician. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1890–1909) and the Reichstag (1881–1907). 175
Schmits, August (1838–1921), journalist and from 1872 to 1901 editor of the Kölnische Zeitung. 115
Schnæbelé, Guillaume (Wilhelm Schnäbele) (1831–1900), French railway police officer, originally from Alsace. 83–84, 86–87, 296
Schönhardt, Karl (1833–1916), jurist. Attorney general at Stuttgart. 424
Schorlemmer-Alst, Burghard Freiherr von (1825–1895), estate owner and Catholic politician. Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1870–1889), the Reichstag (1870–1871; 1874–1885; 1890), and the Prussian upper house (1890–1895). 147–148
Schott von Schottenstein, Maximilian Freiherr (1836–1917), Württemberg general and statesman. Minister of war (1892–1901) and minister president (1900–1901). 453–455
Schütte, Ernst Wilhelm (1848–1919), from 1885 chief of the political police in Berlin. 111
Schwabe, Christian Julius (dates unknown), Saxon public prosecutor. 280, 337
Schweinfurth, Georg August (1836–1925), botanist, ethnologist. Explorer of Africa, and promoter of German colonialism. 182
Schweinitz, Hans Lothar von (1822–1901), Prussian general and diplomat. Envoy extraordinary to Vienna (1869); imperial ambassador to Vienna (1871) and to St Petersburg (1876–1892). 71
Scott, Sir Charles Stewart (1838–1924), British diplomat. Second secretary at Mexico (1866), Lisbon (1868), Stuttgart (1871), Munich (1872), Vienna (1873), St Petersburg (1874), and Darmstadt (1877); secretary of legation at Coburg (1879); repeatedly acting chargé d'affaires at Darmstadt from 1877 to 1883, and at Stuttgart in 1881; secretary of embassy at Berlin (1883); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berne (1888) and Copenhagen (1893); ambassador to St Petersburg (1898–1904). 37–41, 47–57, 60–68, 81–84, 86–93, 106–110
Senden-Bibran, Gustav von (1847–1909), German admiral. Chief of the imperial naval cabinet (1889–1906); adjutant general to Wilhelm II (1901–1909). 177, 206
Sharpe, Alfred (1853–1935), British colonial administrator. Commissioner and consul general for the British Central Africa Protectorate (1896–1907); governor of Nyasaland (1907–1910). 196
Shuvalov, Count Petr Andreievich (1827–1889), Russian diplomat. Ambassador to London (1874–1879). 94, 131–133
Shuvalova, Countess Elena (1830–1922), née Chertkova. Married Pyotr Shuvalov in 1864. 133
Siegle, Gustav (1840–1905), industrialist and Württemberg politician. Reichstag member (1887–1898). 432, 444
Sieveking, Ernst Friedrich (1836–1909), German jurist. Member of the Hamburg Bürgerschaft (1874–1877) and senate (1877–1879); from 1870 president of the common court of appeal of the Hanse towns. 187
Sigl, Johann Baptist (1839–1902), Bavarian journalist and politician. Founding editor of the Bayerisches Vaterland (1869); member of the Reichstag (1893–1898) and the second chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1897–1899). 528, 530–531, 538, 549
Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester (1208–1265), Franco-English nobleman. 370
Singer, Paul (1844–1911), factory owner and socialist politician from Berlin. Reichstag member (1884–1911). 389
Smith, Adam (1723–1790), Scottish philosopher and economist. 360
Smith, William Henry (1825–1891), British bookseller, newsagent, politician, and statesman. MP (1868–1891); first lord of the admiralty (1877–1880); secretary of state for war (1885–1886; 1886–1887); first lord of the treasury (1887–1891). 89, 491
Soden, Heinrich Freiherr von (1864–1941), Württemberg military officer. 509
Soden, Oskar Freiherr von (1831–1906), Württemberg diplomat. Chargé d'affaires at Karlsruhe (1866); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Munich (1868–1906). 451, 495, 509
Solms-Sonnenwalde, Eberhard Graf zu (1825–1912), German diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Rio de Janeiro (1872), Dresden (1873), and Madrid (1878); ambassador to Rome (1887–1893). 155
Spaarmann, Adolf (1837–1911), German publisher at Styrum. 112
Spahn, Peter (1846–1925), jurist and Catholic politician. Prussian minister of justice (1817–1918); member of Prussian house of deputies (1882–1888; 1891–1898; 1904–1907), the Reichstag (1884–1917; vice president 1895–1898; 1909–1911), the Weimar National Assembly (1919/20), and the Weimar Reichstag (1920–1925). 175
Spitzemberg, Wilhelm Freiherr Hugo von (1825–1888), Württemberg general. Grand chamberlain, and aide-de-camp to King Karl I. 436–437
Spring-Rice, Sir Cecil (1859–1918), British diplomat. Second secretary at Brussels (1891), Washington (1893), Berlin (1895), and Constantinople (1898); secretary of legation at Teheran (1898); British commissioner at the Casse de la Dette Publique in Cairo (1901); secretary of embassy at St Petersburg (1903); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Teheran (1906) and Stockholm (1908); ambassador to Washington (1913–1918). 187, 195, 202
Stablewski, Florian (1841–1906), Polish priest and Archbishop of Gniezno and Poznan (1891–1906). Member of the Prussian house of deputies (1876–1891). 137–138
Staelin, Julius (1837–1889), businessman, manufacturer, and politician. Member of the second chamber of the Württemberg Landtag (1876–1889) and the Reichstag (1877–1889). 432
Stanhope, Edward (1840–1893), British politician and statesman. MP (1874–1893); president of the Board of Trade (1885–1886); secretary of state for the colonies (1886–1887); secretary of state for war (1887–1892). 491, 519, 525
Stanley, Edward Henry (1826–1893), styled Lord Stanley prior to 1869, 15th Earl of Derby (1869), British statesman. MP (1848–1869); parliamentary under-secretary at the Foreign Office (1852); secretary of state for the colonies (1858; 1882–1885); first secretary of state for India (1858–1859); foreign secretary (1866–1868; 1874–1878). 37, 191, 470, 510
Stanley, Henry Morton (1841–1904), British-American explorer and journalist. 319
Starabba, Antonio, marchese di Rudini (1839–1908), Italian statesman. Prime minister of Italy (1891–1892; 1896–1898). 129, 140
Starke, Wilhelm (1824–1903), German jurist and civil servant. From 1873 to 1896 official in the Berlin ministry of justice; member of the Prussian house of deputies (1859–1861; 1866–1867). 199
Stauffenberg, Franz August Freiherr Schenk von (1834–1901), jurist and politician. Member of the Bavarian second chamber (1867–1877; 1879–1899; president 1873–1875); Reichstag member (1871–1893; vice president 1876–1879). 73
Staveley, Thomas G. (1825–1887), civil servant (Foreign Office). Junior Clerk (1843), assistant clerk (1857), senior clerk (1860). 37, 39
Steichele, Anton von (1816–1889), Catholic priest and church historian. From 1878 Archbishop of Munich and Freising. 543
Stephan, Heinrich von (1831–1897), Prussian civil servant. General post director (1870), postmaster general (1876), and state secretary of the imperial post office (1880–1897); Prussian minister of state without portfolio. Member of the Prussian upper house from 1872. 195–196
Stephen, Sir Alexander Condie (1850–1908), British diplomat and translator. Secretary of legation and chargé d'affaires at Coburg (1893–1897); minister resident at Dresden (1897–1901). 148
Stoecker, Adolf (1835–1909), Lutheran theologian, publicist, and politician. Founder of the anti-Semitic Christlich-Soziale Arbeiterpartei (1878); member of the second chamber of the Prussian Landtag (1879–1898) and the Reichstag (1881–1893; 1898–1908). 97, 109n, 325
Stoilov, Konstantin (1853–1901), Bulgarian politician and statesman. Minister of foreign affairs (1881; 1883; 1896–1899); minister of justice (1883–1884; 1886–1888; 1894–1896); prime minister (1887; 1894–1899). 233–234
Strachey, Catherine (1841–1920), née Doveton. Married George Strachey in 1862. 418
Strachey, George (1828–1912), British diplomat. Secretary of legation at Copenhagen (1867), Berne (1873), and Dresden (1873, with additional role of chargé d'affaires); minister resident (1890–1897). 7–8, 11, 17, 21, 23–26, 265–419
Strenge, Karl Friedrich von (1843–1907), jurist and statesman. State minister of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1891–1900). 152
Stromer von Reichenbach, Otto Freiherr von (1831–1891), jurist and mayor of Nuremberg (1867–1891). 325
Stübel, Paul Alfred (1827–1895), lawyer and politician. Mayor of Dresden (1877–1895); member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1877–1884) and the Reichstag (1881–1884). 302, 314
Swaine, Leopold (1840–1931), British army officer. Military attaché at St Petersburg (1878), Constantinople (1879–1881), and Berlin (1882–1889; 1891–1896). 38, 58–59, 81–82, 86, 91–93, 116–117, 144–145, 149–150, 165
Széchényi, Emmerich Graf (1825–1898), Austrian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Stockholm (1849–1850) and Naples (1860–1864); ambassador to Berlin (1878–1892). 40
Tauffkirchen-Guttenberg, Carl von (1826–1895), Bavarian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at St Petersburg (1867), the Holy See (1869; from 1871 also accredited for Prussia), and Stuttgart (1874–1895). 79n-80
Tausch, Eugen von (1844–1912), policeman; from 1887 superintendent of the Berlin political police. 209, 213
Tcherevin, see Cherevin, Pyotr Alexandrovich
Tessendorff, Hermann (1851–1895), Prussian jurist. Public prosecutor in Burg (1864), Magdeburg (1867), and Berlin (1873); Senatspräsident at the higher regional courts in Königsberg (1879), Naumburg (1884), and at the Berlin Kammergericht (1885); from 1886 Oberreichsanwalt in Leipzig. 86
Thielmann, Max von (1846–1929), German diplomat. Secretary of legation at Washington (1875) and Brussels (1878); first secretary at Paris (1880), Constantinople (1883). Consul general at Sofia (1886); Prussian envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Darmstadt (1887), Hamburg (1890); and Munich (1895); ambassador to Washington (1895); secretary of state of the imperial treasury (1897–1903). 70
Thiers, Adolphe (1797–1877), French statesman and politician. President of the Third Republic (1871–1873). 289, 343
Thil, Friederike Freifrau du Bos du (1811–1891), née Freiin v. Rotsmann. From 1855 mistress of the robes at the grand ducal court of Hesse. 244–245
Thil, Karl Wilhelm Heinrich Freiherr du Bos du (1777–1859), Hessian statesman. Minister of foreign affairs (1821–1847), minister for finance (1821–1829), and minister president (1829–1848); member of the first chamber of the Hessian Landtag (1820–1847). 244
Thümmel, Hans von (1824–1895), Saxon jurist and statesman. Minister of finance (1890–1895) and minister president (1891–1895). 346–347, 398–399
Tillett, Ben (1860–1943), British socialist politician and trades unionist. Alderman on the London County Council (1892–1898); MP (1917–1924; 1929–1931). 389
Tirpitz, Alfred von (1849–1930), German admiral, statesman and politician. State secretary of the imperial naval office (1897–1916); member of the Weimar Reichstag (1924–1928). 214, 552
Toerring-Jettenbach, Clemens Maria zu (1826–1891), Bavarian civil servant and chamberlain to Ludwig II; hereditary member of the first chamber of the Bavarian Landtag (1866). 487
Trafford, William Henry (1833–1910), English jurist and justice of peace for Norfolk; friend of Randolph Churchill. 287
Treitschke, Heinrich von (1834–1896), historian and publicist. Professor at the universities of Freiburg, Kiel, Heidelberg, and, from 1873, Berlin; Reichstag member (1871–1884). 309, 406n
Trench, Power Henry Le Poer (1841–1899), British diplomat. Second secretary at Washington (1870), the Foreign Office (1879), and Rome (1881); secretary of legation at Tokyo (1882–1889); secretary of embassy at Berlin (1889–1893); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary in Mexico (1893–1894) and Japan (1894–1896; also consul general). 128–131, 140–143, 145–147
Tschirschky und Bögendorff, Heinrich von (1858–1916), German diplomat. Private secretary to Herbert von Bismarck (1885); secretary of legation at Vienna (1886), Athens (1888), and Berne (1890); first secretary at Constantinople (1893) and St Petersburg (1894); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Luxembourg (1900); Prussian envoy to Hamburg (1901); secretary of state for foreign affairs (1906–1907); ambassador to Vienna (1913–1916). 69–70
Turban, Ludwig Karl Friedrich (1821–1898), Baden statesman. Minister of commerce (1872–1881); minister president and minister of foreign affairs (1876–1893); minister of the interior (1881–1890). 234–235, 237–239, 242, 245–247
Ulrich, Carl (1853–1933), Printer, journalist, socialist politician, and statesman. State president of the People's State of Hesse (1919–1928); member of the second chamber of the Grand Duchy of Hesse (1884–1818), the Hessian Landtag (1919–1931), and the Reichstag (1890–1903, 1907–1918, 1919–1930). 242
Ulrich, Justus (1835–1900), brewery owner and Hessian politician. Reichstag member (1884–1890).
Umberto I (1844–1900), King of Italy from 1878. 128–129, 141, 155n
Urach, Wilhelm Karl von (1864–1928), Count of Württemberg, 2nd Duke of Urach; German general. 434
Vansittart, Arthur George (1855–1911), British diplomat. Third secretary at Athens (1879) and Lisbon (1879); second secretary at Buenos Aires (1881), Berlin (1883), The Hague (1884), Stuttgart (1885), Belgrade (1887), Madrid (1892), and Munich (1894); consul at Chicago (1895) and New Orleans (1897); consul general for the Republic of Haiti and San Domingo (1903). 459–460, 535–536, 536, 538
Varnbüler von und zu Hemmingen, Axel (1851–1937), Württemberg diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at St Petersburg (1890), Vienna (1893), and Berlin (1894–1918). 166
Varnbüler von und zu Hemmingen, Friedrich Gottlob Karl Freiherr (1809–1889), Württemberg statesman and politician. Member of the Württemberg chamber of deputies (1844–1849; 1851–1889); head of government and minister of foreign affairs (1864–1870); Reichstag member (1872–1881). 431
Vaux of Harrowden see Mostyn, Hubert George Charles
Veiel, Ludwig (1845–1905), jurist and Württemberg politician. From 1897 judge at the Imperial Court of Justice. Reichstag member (1884–1890). 432
Velten, Carl (1819–1896), German physician and Empress Augusta's personal medical attendant. 38
Vera Constantinovna (1854–1912), Grand Duchess of Russia. Married Eugen of Württemberg. 434
Victoria (1819–1901), Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from1837. Empress of India from 1876. 4, 9, 19–20, 39, 53, 56–57, 85–86, 99–101, 117–119, 121, 188, 193, 212–213, 230, 293n, 297n, 299–300, 308–309, 313, 315, 322, 327, 360n, 390, 440n–441, 445, 497–498
Victoria (1840–1901), Princess Royal of the United Kingdom. Married Friedrich Wilhelm (Friedrich III) in 1858; German Empress and Queen of Prussia from 1888. Known as Empress Frederick after her husband's untimely death in 1888. 20, 39–40, 86, 99–100, 111, 131, 133–135, 205, 259, 305, 308–309, 315, 324, 394, 434, 443
Viktoria (1866–1929), Princess of Prussia. Married Adolf of Schaumburg-Lippe in 1890 and, secondly, Alexander Zoubkoff in 1927. 20, 99n, 101
Villers, Hippolyte de (1843–1920), Luxembourg diplomat. Chargé d'affaires at Berlin (1889–1916). 150
Villiers, George (1847–1892), British army officer; military attaché at St Petersburg (1880), Berlin (1881) and Paris (1882–1889). 39, 64
Virchow, Rudolf (1821–1902), German pathologist, anthropologist, and liberal politician. Professor at Würzburg (1849) and Berlin (1856); member of the Prussian house of deputies (1862–1902) and the Reichstag (1880–1893). 362
Vittorio Emanuele III (1869–1947), Prince of Naples; King of Italy (1900–1946). Emperor of Ethiopia (1936–1941) and King of the Albanians (1939–1943). 150–151
Vivian, Hussey Crespigny (1834–1893), 3rd Baron Vivian (1886), British diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Berne (1879), Copenhagen (1881), and Brussels (1884); ambassador to Rome (1892–1893). 155
Vladimir Alexandrovich (1848–1909), Grand Duke of Russia and army officer. 71, 185
Vohsen, Ernst (1853–1919), German colonist and publisher. Agent of the French Senegal Company (1875–1887); German consul at Sierra Leone (1881–1887); head of the Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft (1888–1892). 187
Vollmar, Georg von (1850–1922), politician and socialist publicist. Chairman of the Social Democratic Party in Bavaria from 1894; member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1881–1889), the Bavarian Landtag (1893–1918), and the Reichstag (1881–1887; 1890–1918). 266, 279, 472, 535–537, 539
Waddington, William (1826–1894), French statesman and diplomat. Minister of public instruction (1873; 1877); minister of foreign affairs (1877–1879); prime minister (1879); ambassador to London (1883–1893). 76
Wagner, Richard (1813–1883), German composer. 297, 323
Waldersee, Alfred Graf von (1832–1904), German general. Chief of the imperial general staff (1888–1891); commander of the IX imperial army corps (1891–1898); inspector general of the 3rd army inspectorate (1898–1904); commander of the international relief expedition in China (1900). 131–132, 206, 325
Waldersee, Georg Graf von (1860–1932), Prussian army officer. 117
Walpole, Horatio (1717–1797), 4th Earl of Orford, English writer and politician. MP (1741–1768). 344
Walpole, Robert (1676–1745), British statesman and prime minister (1721–1742). 289
Walsham, Sir John (1830–1905), British diplomat. Secretary of embassy at Berlin (1878) and Paris (1883); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Peking (1885) and Bucharest (1892–1895). 34
Washington, Carl Theodor Freiherr von (1833–1897), Bavarian military officer; in 1886 briefly chamberlain to Ludwig II of Bavaria. 486–487
Wasserburg, Phillipp (1827–1897), writer (pseud. Philipp Laicus) and Catholic politician. Member of the second chamber of the Hessian Landtag (1878–1890; 1893–1897). 242
Watzdorf, Werner von (1836–1904), Saxon civil servant and statesman. Geheimer Legationsrat (1872) and Erster Rat (1881) in the Saxon ministry of foreign affairs; minister of finance (1895–1902). 284, 399
Werthern, Georg Graf von (1816–1895), Prussian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Athens (1860), Constantinople (1862), Lisbon (1863), Madrid (1864), and Munich (1867–1888). 484
Wetzlich, Eduard (1839–1905), glazier, entrepreneur, and conservative politician. Member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1885–1897) and the Weimar National Assembly (1919–1920). 379
Weyer, Sylvain van de (1802–1874), Belgian statesman and diplomat. Prime minister (1845–1846); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at London (1831–1845; 1846–1867). 322
White, Sir William Arthur (1824–1891), British diplomat. Agent and consul general at Serbia (1875–1878); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Bucharest (1879–1885); ambassador to Constantinople, (1887–1891). 72
Whitehead, Sir James Beethom (1858–1928), British diplomat. Second secretary at Berlin (1889); secretary of legation at Tokyo (1898) and Brussels (1901); secretary of embassy at Constantinople (1902) and Berlin (1903); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Belgrade (1906–1919). 151, 198
Wilhelm (1806–1884), Duke of Brunswick from 1830. 55n–57
Wilhelm (1882–1951), Prussian prince; son of Wilhelm II. 177
Wilhelm I (1797–1888), deputized in 1857 for Friedrich Wilhelm IV, became regent in 1858, King of Prussia from 1861. German Emperor from 1871. 8, 21, 38, 53–54, 67, 70, 72, 77, 84, 92–97, 104–106, 134n, 145, 240, 261n–262, 293–294, 297–299, 305–308, 314, 324, 330–331, 341, 406, 428–429, 436, 508–509, 520, 524, 548
Wilhelm II (1859–1941), German Emperor and King of Prussia (1888–1918). 10, 16–18, 20–22, 40, 85, 98, 101, 104–107, 109–110, 113, 115, 117–125, 127, 135, 137–139, 141–142, 145–150, 152–157, 161–167, 174, 176–178, 181, 184, 188, 190, 192–194, 200, 203, 205–208, 212–214, 248n, 259, 297–298, 305, 311–315, 320–321, 323–326, 327n–332, 339, 343–344, 352–358, 361–363, 366–368, 377–378, 384–386, 394, 398–400, 402, 405–406, 408–409, 411–413, 416n, 428, 445–447, 452–456, 462, 511, 519–520, 522, 524, 532, 539–542, 544–548, 551
Wilhelm I (1781–1864), King of Württemberg (1816). 454
Wilhelm II (1848–1921), Prince of Württemberg. King of Württemberg (1891–1918). 151, 429, 434, 437–442, 445–447, 453–454, 456–457, 460, 474
Wilkes, John (1725–1797), English journalist and radical politician. MP (1857–1764; 1768–1769; 1774–1790). 363
Windthorst, Ludwig (1812–1891), Hanoverian statesman and Catholic politician. Minister of justice (1851–1853; 1862–1865); member of the Hanoverian second chamber (1849–1856; 1862–1866; its president 1851), the Reichstag (1867–1891), the Prussian house of deputies (1867–1891), and the provincial assembly of Hanover (1884–1891). 62, 74, 147, 288, 432, 493, 496, 528
Wingfield, Mervyn (1836–1904), Irish peer, 7th Viscount Powerscourt from 1844. 249
Winterfeld, Hugo von (1836–1896), Prussian general of the infantry. 146, 313
Wissmann, Hermann von (1853–1905), German army officer, explorer and colonial administrator. Reichskommissar (1889–1890) and governor of German East Africa (1895–1896). 187, 196n–197
Witbooi, Hendrik (!Nanseb |Gabemab) (c.1830–1905), chief of the |Khowesin people from 1888. Leader of the |Khowesin in the revolt against German rule in Namibia from 1904; killed in action in the following year. 200
Witte, Emil (1864–1918), journalist and translator. Berlin correspondent for Reuters and The Standard.
Witzleben, Arthur von (1835–1905), Brunswick administrator (Landschaftsdirektor) and chamberlain of Prince Albrecht of Prussia (as regent of Brunswick). 146
Wodehouse, John (1826–1902), British politician and statesman. Parliamentary under-secretary of state for foreign affairs (1852–1856; 1859–1861); colonial secretary (1870–1874; 1880–1882); secretary of state for India (1882–1885; 1886; 1892–1894); secretary of state for foreign affairs (1894–1895); created 1st Earl of Kimberley (1866). 156–179, 179n, 250–256, 386–401, 456–462, 534–541
Woermann, Karl (1844–1933), German art historian. Professor at the Dusseldorf Kunstakademie (1873) and director of the Saxon picture gallery at Dresden (1882). 293
Wölckern, Wilhelm von (1827–1905), Württemberg general. Commander of the XIII (Royal Württemberg) imperial army corps (1886–1895). 453
Wolkenstein-Trostburg, Anton von (1832–1913), Austrian-Hungarian diplomat. Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Dresden (1880); head of the trade department in the Austrian foreign office (1881); ambassador to St Petersburg (1882) and Paris (1894–1903). 92
Woodcock, Charles (1850–1923), American pastor. From 1879 to 1889 on continental tour in Europe; from 1883 at Stuttgart where, while royal chamberlain, lover of King Karl of Württemberg; created Freiherr von Savage in 1888. 19–20, 436–440
Wyndham, Percy (1864–1944), British diplomat. Third secretary at Berlin (1892) and Teheran (1895); second secretary at Teheran (1895), Vienna (1897), and Constantinople (1897); secretary of legation at Brussels (1906); secretary of embassy at Rome (1808); envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary at Bogota; special mission to the Republic of Poland (1919). 151
Xylander, Emil von (1835–1911), Bavarian general. Plenipotentiary at the Federal Council (1884–1890). 34
Zedlitz und Trützschler, Robert Graf von (1837–1914), Prussian civil servant and statesman. Minister for cultural affairs (1891–1892). Oberpräsident of the Prussian provinces of Poznań (1886), Hesse-Nassau (1898) and Silesia (1903–1908); member of the Prussian upper house from 1910. 138–139
Zimmermann, Oswald (1859–1910), journalist, publicist, and anti-Semitic politician. Member of the second chamber of the Saxon Landtag (1903–1908) and the Reichstag (1890–1898; 1904–1910). 243